Warm weather has fueled a bloom that National Park Service workers are trying to kill using everything from hydrogen peroxide to nanobubbles ahead of July 4 celebrations.
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It could have been a recipe of disaster. It's a very classic situation where Ebola can very fastly devastate the community. They are playing together and they are spending the whole day together, so it's spreading from one person to the next. And for zero time you'll see the entire community being infected.
The New York Times
As the Trump administration rolls back environmental regulations, we revisit a 2022 episode that explored the hidden cost of an invisible threat: air pollution.
Freakonomics Radio
People who die from Ebola remain highly infectious. That's why burial teams are trained to handle them in protective gear, to disinfect the body and keep families from touching the dead. But those rules are breaking down.
The New York Times