by David Brooks | Apr 3, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
Interesting new research from UNH using DNA from 50-year-old bobcat skulls found that bobcats’ movement patterns from generation to generation have flipped: Once they were more numerous in southern parts of New England young adults headed to the less hospitable...
by David Brooks | Apr 2, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
Feld schools coordinated by the N.H. Division of Historical Resources’ State Conservation and Rescue Archaeology Program (SCRAP), will take place this summer in Durham, Livermore Hollow and Pillsbury State Park, where the team will canoe to the survey site searching...
by David Brooks | Apr 2, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
Stop me if you’ve heard this before: A well-known New Hampshire entrepreneur wants to create an home-sized power plant that can provide electricity, heat and hot water using a type of engine that has been around for a century but never really commercialized. Nope,...
by David Brooks | Apr 2, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
Update: It passed the House on April 4, 209-146, It will still have to go to the state Senate and the governor’s desk. Being a tourist destination can be good for business but hard on roads and other municipal services, which is why the legislature may let...
by David Brooks | Mar 28, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
The disagreement over genetically-modified organisms has shown up in an unexpected place: Efforts to resurrect the American chestnut tree, which was wiped out by blight last century. The American Chestnut Foundation has spent years cross-breeding a few surviving...