A few minutes beside trees or water can shift the brain into a calmer state. That change is not just a feeling.
Brain scans show that time in nature quiets stress circuits, restores attention, and reduces rumination in measurable ways.
Seirian Sumner receives funding from the UK government's Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC). She is a Trustee and Fellow ...
Escaping into nature is one of the most rewarding ways to restore balance, slow the pace of life, and reconnect with what truly matters. Nestled in the Smoky Mountains, Tennessee, a well-planned ...
Museums are strange things, Jack Ashby, assistant director of the University Museum of Zoology in Cambridge, UK, points out in his new book, Nature’s Memory: Behind the scenes at the world’s natural ...
Taking a deep breath as I walk into Nature’s Pantry, I know exactly where I am. There is a unique aroma to a natural food store that blends the scents of herbs, flours, nuts, seeds, essential oils, ...
The perception of natural history collections is often one of a static time-capsule, recording the animals and plants that once were. But the reality is that they are an extraordinary resource that ...
AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Texan by Nature (TxN), a conservation non-profit, today announces the selection of the 2025 TxN Conservation Wranglers. Conservation Wrangler is an accelerator program ...
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