Anyone Can Help Monarch Butterflies. All You Need Is a Yard. National GeographicMichelle NijhuisDecember 14, 2023
This Secret Police Archive Holds Clues to Terrible Crimes National GeographicMichelle NijhuisAugust 17, 2017History
How the Parks of Tomorrow Will Be Different National GeographicMichelle NijhuisDecember 1, 2016Energy and Climate Change, History, Ecology and Conservation, All-time Favorites
Why Trump Can't Make Coal Great Again National GeographicMichelle NijhuisNovember 29, 2016Energy and Climate Change
What We Can Learn From the California Drought National GeographicMichelle NijhuisNovember 7, 2016Energy and Climate Change, Essays
Japanese Monks Recorded the Climate for 700 Years National GeographicMichelle NijhuisApril 26, 2016History, Energy and Climate Change
How Fire, Once a Friend of Forests, Became a Destroyer National GeographicMichelle NijhuisNovember 22, 2015Reviews and Interviews, Ecology and Conservation
Harnessing the Mekong or Killing It? National GeographicMichelle NijhuisMay 1, 2015Ecology and Conservation, All-time Favorites
Dam Removal Captures the Public’s Imagination National GeographicMichelle NijhuisFebruary 3, 2015Ecology and Conservation
Movement to Take Down Thousands of Dams Goes Mainstream National GeographicMichelle NijhuisJanuary 29, 2015Ecology and Conservation
Is Two Degrees the Right Limit for Global Warming? National GeographicMichelle NijhuisOctober 1, 2014Energy and Climate Change
How Dust Might Make Drought Worse (Or a Bit Better) in California National GeographicMichelle NijhuisSeptember 20, 2014Energy and Climate Change
Amid Drought, New California Law Will Limit Groundwater Pumping for The First Time National GeographicMichelle NijhuisSeptember 18, 2014Ecology and Conservation, Energy and Climate Change
When the Snows Fail National GeographicMichelle NijhuisSeptember 1, 2014Ecology and Conservation, Energy and Climate Change