The Sound of Climate Change The AtlanticMichelle NijhuisSeptember 14, 2016Ecology and Conservation, Energy and Climate Change, Art and Artists
Science Metaphors (cont.): The Anthropocene The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisAugust 31, 2016Energy and Climate Change, Essays, Language
After a Hundred Years of the Park Service, What’s Next? The New YorkerMichelle NijhuisAugust 25, 2016History, Ecology and Conservation
Toward a Unified Theory of Poohsticks The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisAugust 12, 2016Essays, Parenting
Are Conservationists Worrying too Much About Climate Change? The New YorkerMichelle NijhuisAugust 10, 2016Ecology and Conservation, Energy and Climate Change
How to Name a Caribou The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisJuly 29, 2016Ecology and Conservation, Language, Essays
What ‘Frankenstein’ Says About Climate Change The AtlanticMichelle NijhuisJune 15, 2016Literature, History, Energy and Climate Change, Essays
When Oil Transport Goes Off the Rails The New YorkerMichelle NijhuisJune 7, 2016Energy and Climate Change
There’s No Such Thing As Pristine Nature The New YorkerMichelle NijhuisJune 6, 2016Ecology and Conservation
Shakespeare Was a Journalist The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisApril 26, 2016History, On Writing, Literature, Essays
Japanese Monks Recorded the Climate for 700 Years National GeographicMichelle NijhuisApril 26, 2016History, Energy and Climate Change
A Brief Guide to Writing Reported Essays The Open NotebookMichelle NijhuisFebruary 23, 2016On Writing
Simplify, Simplify The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisFebruary 16, 2016History, Ecology and Conservation, Literature
Antevernals in the Anthropocene The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisFebruary 9, 2016Language, Literature, On Writing, Energy and Climate Change, Reviews and Interviews
“Which Species Will Live?” in the Norton Reader BooksMichelle NijhuisFebruary 1, 2016Ecology and Conservation
In the Oregon Standoff, Science is a Hostage The Last Word on NothingMichelle NijhuisJanuary 12, 2016Ecology and Conservation, Essays