Water
Minnesota folk rocker/scholar studies environmental music, plays it too
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Folk rocker and scholar Mark Pedelty plays for the Hypoxic Punks to better understand how music influences environmental attitudes.
Great Lakes Echo (http://greatlakesecho.org/tag/hypoxia/)
Folk rocker and scholar Mark Pedelty plays for the Hypoxic Punks to better understand how music influences environmental attitudes.
Little additional land has been converted to cropland since the 1950’s, but a recent study reports that changes in its use could pave the way for more dead zones in the Great Lakes.
They are deadly for aquatic life and take years of pollution to develop, yet dead zones can be created in a flash by bubbling nitrogen through a lake. Are they a solution for invading carp?
Researchers are studying if an induced dead zone could discourage invasive species from moving between the Great Lakes and Mississippi watersheds.