So You Want To Save Water?

Anon E. MooseEnvironment

ecosnobberysucks: How much water are you really using? Many of us have low flow shower heads and our toilets are using less water, but how does that compare to the water that goes into the things we use and consume every day?

Bike | Light Project

Anon E. MooseThe Art

Bike, Light, Dance: A visual project made to promote safe cycling! Published on Mar 9, 2013 LIGHT | NIGHT, the culminating event of the UT Safe Cycling Campaign, was a cross-disciplinary effort between School of Architecture graduate student and campaign coordinator Kate Bedford, design students in the Department of Art and Art History, and performers and costume designers from the …

The Tree Nursery

Anon E. MooseEnvironment

How to grow 35,000 trees! This was such a fun project to watch literally be created before my eyes…  The UT Tree Nursery at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower center in Austin is an ongoing effort towards…well, namely growing trees! The nursery has expanded greatly, and is now a brimming orchard housing over 70,000 trees of all types. The Loblolly …

Who Controls the World?

Anon E. MooseMysteries and Discoveries, poliTics

What degree of influence do corporations really have in the power politics of the world? James Glattfelder asserts that ownership is related to control, and claims that by looking at ownership networks it may be possible to answer questions like, “who controls the world?”.  In this talk, Glatterfelder explains potential power, systemic risk, pipes of control, and everything you never wanted …

Corn Is Amazing

Anon E. MooseEnvironment

Every time you chow a corncob, you are eating Maiz vagina… thank a farmer, and get some! Tall sexy stalks and voluptuous cobs, it is hard to find a more distichous specimen. The male flower of Zea Maiz, elongated, towering high above produces pollen, while the female cob of the plant protects the inner bounty with a husk. Silt protrudes from …

Amazing Science – Changing how We Grow

Anon E. MooseEnvironment

Amazing Science – Changing how We Grow (by UTesi) Imagine, the minuscule algae from waste water ponds could supply energy, while simultaneously helping solve major problems like agricultural run-off, dead-zones, and green-house inducing carbon emissions. I am honestly amazed more people aren’t talking about this amazing discovery. Video produced here in Austin Texas for the Environmental Science Institute. -ArtIsInFormation.org (Source: …