DEI does not mean lower standards.
You are thinking of white privilege.
This is rapidly becoming an audio drama blog. I just adore podcasts.
As Earth’s climate changes, some places are drying out and others are getting wetter, including the land that produces the food we eat. Farmers have to figure out how to adapt to changing climate conditions.
Our fleet of satellites has been watching over Earth for more than half a century. Some, like our joint Landsat mission with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), collect valuable data about the crops that make up our food supply and the water it takes to grow them.
Combining this wealth of satellite data with observations on the ground allows us to track how crop production changes over the years.
For example, this map shows how croplands have changed over the years to feed a growing population. The Agriculture Department (USDA) has used Landsat data since 2008 to track crops growing in the continental United States.
Agricultural scientists can even focus in on data for individual crops like corn, wheat and soybeans. They can look closely at regional crops, like citrus, that grow in only a few areas.
This nationwide view — provided by Landsat satellites orbiting 438 miles above Earth — is important to track the nation’s food supply. But with data from other satellites, like our ECOSTRESS instrument and ESA’s (the European Space Agency) Sentinel-2, agricultural scientists can monitor how healthy crops are in real time and predict when they’ll be ready to harvest.
In this false-color image of California farmland, red areas peak early in the season, whereas blue areas peak late. This information helps farmers watch over the plants in their fields, predict when they’ll be ready to harvest, and maximize crop production.
But while growing more and more crops sounds good, there can be challenges, like water. Especially when there’s not enough of it.
During California’s recent drought, just over 1 million acres of fertile farmland (shown in green) were fallow, or unused (red) in 2015. That’s nearly double the number of unused fields in 2011, the last year with normal rainfall before the drought.
Irrigating acres and acres of farmland takes lots of water. With remote sensing, scientists can track how irrigation fluctuates with climate change, new water management policies, or new technologies. Research like this helps farmers grow the most crops with the least amount of water.
As our climate changes, it’s more important than ever for farmers to have the knowledge they need to grow crops in a warming world. The data collected by our Earth-observing satellites help farmers learn about the planet that sustains us — and make better decisions about how to cultivate it.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
To follow up, here are some that I started and never finished.
This is not to say that I wouldn’t give them another shot, but they just didn’t pull me in yknow
- I am in Eskew
- the Penumbra Podcast
- woe.begone
- archive 81
- Unwell
- Mabel
- antiquarium of sinister happenings
- Redwood Bureau (I did LOVE the first couple of episodes)
-stellar firma
- Death by Dying (Loved it at the start, lost steam for it and will revisit)
-Nowhere, on Air
- the storage papers
- Camp Here and There
- Malevolent
Some fiction podcasts I have listened to and enjoyed:
- The Magnus Archives (they really started it all for me)
- The Silt Verses(the loves of my life, I could ramble all day about my undying love for this pod)
- Wolf 359 (platonic love to the max my dudes)
- Midnight Burger
- The White Vault (🦷)
- Hello from the Hallowoods
- Secret of St. Kilda (Maebh de Brun the woman you are)
- VAST Horizon
- Fathom/Derelict
- The Unpredicted Party
- Trice forgotten
- the No Sleep Podcast
- Old Gods of Appalachia
- Tower 4
- Darkest Night (I’ve never been so simultaneously horrified and also unable to stop listening)
- Borrasca (a classic No Sleep Reddit post with Cole Sprouse as the mc?!?)
- Red Valley
- Bridgewater
The Blues Brothers (1980)
Repeat after me: - Veganism is not affordable - Veganism is not cruelty free - Veganism is not the best choice for everyone
the introvert urge to say “no worries either way” when you’re actually worrying both ways plus a secret third way
Samli Drones
Tractors vs Drones: The Future of Farming 🚜✈️ With drones increasingly taking over the agricultural sector, they are used hand-in-hand with tractors, not as substitutes. Drones offer precision, efficiency, and sustainability, while tractors do heavy work. Together, they are the ideal pair for the future of farming. 🌱
Please tell me that y'all won't go back to tiktok once Trump gets whatever nefarious concessions he wants from the company and "saves" it. Like, you all NEED to stay gone. Stay on Xiaohongshu or move to other platforms or create a new one or whatever, but don't go back to whatever Trump-appeasement monstrosity TikTok is about to become. Don't do it.
Bad Writer. Occasional Artist. Big fan of agriculture.
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