Results 261 to 270 of about 113,074 (350)

River plastic hotspot detection from space. [PDF]

open access: yesiScience
Pérez-García Á   +4 more
europepmc   +1 more source

The Great Garbage Patch: The Bionauts’ Challenge – An Educational Escape Room on Marine Plastic Pollution and on Possible Solutions

open access: diamond
F. Chiarello   +11 more
openalex   +2 more sources

Fossil Hegemony and Capitalist Realism in Tropic of Orange

open access: yesFuture Humanities, Volume 4, Issue 1, May 2026.
ABSTRACT This article examines Karen Tei Yamashita's Tropic of Orange (1997) through the lens of Mark Fisher's influential concept ‘capitalist realism’. Scholars of petrofiction have pointed to a political ambivalence in the representation of fossil fuels, where a better understanding of fossil capital can overwhelm as much as galvanize.
Claire Ravenscroft
wiley   +1 more source

Marine plastic pollution in waters around Australia: characteristics, concentrations, and pathways. [PDF]

open access: yesPLoS One, 2013
Reisser J   +6 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Telecological Collapse: The Inevitability of Climate Breakdown in the Transmedial Podcast Drama Forest 404

open access: yesFuture Humanities, Volume 4, Issue 1, May 2026.
ABSTRACT This paper presents a close‐hearing analysis of Forest 404, a transmedial audio drama that was released to BBC Sounds in 2019. Despite the drama's eco‐dystopian critique of teleological ‘progress’ narratives (that enable and perpetuate the destruction of the natural world), I argue that the series ultimately propagates a sense of inevitability
Matilda Jones
wiley   +1 more source

Global styrene oligomers monitoring as new chemical contamination from polystyrene plastic marine pollution

open access: green, 2015
Bum Gun Kwon   +5 more
openalex   +2 more sources

World Ocean Review 2010 : Living with the oceans [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
Bollmann, Moritz   +35 more
core  

Narrative Horizons: Deliberate Derangement in Oceanic Climate Fiction

open access: yesFuture Humanities, Volume 4, Issue 1, May 2026.
ABSTRACT Although we live in the Anthropocene—the geological age of humankind, wherein humans have measurably impacted the biosphere—we struggle to narrate the Anthropocene. In particular, we struggle to give narrative shape to its foremost feature: anthropogenic climate change.
Mark Celeste
wiley   +1 more source

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