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Will I Get To Visit Antarctica Before It Collapses?
Climate Change

Will I Get To Visit Antarctica Before It Collapses?

Are These Trees the Key to the Climate Change Crisis?
Biodiversity Conservation | Climate Change | Policy | Pollution

Are These Trees the Key to the Climate Change Crisis?

If We Assumed That Human-Induced Climate Change Isn’t Real
Climate Change | Economy & Society | Policy | Pollution

If We Assumed That Human-Induced Climate Change Isn’t Real

Carbon Pricing Has Proven to Cut Emissions, Not Just Hot Air
Climate Change | Policy

Carbon Pricing Has Proven to Cut Emissions, Not Just Hot Air

Amazon Wildfires Pushing Toward Global Ecological Catastrophe
Climate Change | Policy

Amazon Wildfires Pushing Toward Global Ecological Catastrophe

How To Talk To Climate Change Deniers
Climate Change | Economy & Society

How To Talk To Climate Change Deniers

Is A Healthier Diet Also Better For The Planet?
Climate Change | Pollution

Is A Healthier Diet Also Better For The Planet?

Was T. rex Smarter Than A Baboon?
Evolution

Was T. rex Smarter Than A Baboon?

Fossilized Human Testicles Or A Dinosaur Bone?
Paleontology

Fossilized Human Testicles Or A Dinosaur Bone?

What if Climate Change Predictions Don’t Come True?
Climate Change | Economy & Society | Evolution | Policy | Pollution

What if Climate Change Predictions Don’t Come True?

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White Ice Formation

Welcome to Climate Ages

Where Conservation, Fossils, and Climate meet

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Illustration showing a fossil trackway slab with color-coded footprints in the foreground and a reconstructed early reptile walking beside it in a natural Australian landscape. Front foot (manus) prints are highlighted in yellow, hind foot (pes) prints in blue. The background features a lake and eucalyptus trees. Fossil photo credit: Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki. Reptile reconstruction by Marcin Ambrozik.
Biodiversity Conservation · Evolution · Paleontology
They Walked the Earth 35 Million Years Earlier Than We Thought
Satellite image of a large hurricane swirling over the ocean, with a cartoon illustration of hands checking a wristwatch in the lower left corner—symbolizing urgency in addressing climate change
Climate Change · Paleontology
Earth Took 269,000 Years to Recover From This Climate Event
A fossil of a prehistoric marine reptile embedded in rock, with two cartoon dice overlaid near its skull—suggesting chance or randomness in fossil discovery
Biodiversity Conservation · Evolution · Paleontology
Why Some Creatures Fossilize While Others Vanish Without a Trace
A giant panda eating bamboo in a lush green setting, with an illustrated conservation symbol showing hands holding a tree and landscape overlaid on the right side
Biodiversity Conservation · Ecology
Why Aren’t You Trying To Save Pandas? Rethinking the Faces of Conservation

climate_ages

Where Paleontology, Conservation, and Climate Meet
Founder of Climate Ages
& the Medium Publications Fossils et al. and STEM Parenting

Albert Einstein famously said: “I have no specia Albert Einstein famously said:
“I have no special talents. I am only passionately curious.”
And yet, most scientists I know still worry they’re not “smart enough.”

Here are 4 reasons you don’t need to be a genius to do meaningful science:

• Curiosity beats brilliance.
Genius is rare. But curiosity? That’s what drives discovery across time, climate, and change.

• Persistence builds connection.
Doing the work, day after day, matters more than breakthroughs. That’s how we build understanding and trust.

• Story gives science purpose.
You don’t need to be the smartest person in the room. You need to care enough to explain the why.

• The future needs more voices.
If we want people to care about science, they need to see scientists who look, sound, and feel human.

I’ve seen too many brilliant people hold back because they think they don’t “belong” 
Or because they think they’re not smart enough

But science doesn’t need more lone geniuses.
It needs people who care deeply about the meaning of the work.

What held you back when you first started in science, or what’s holding you back now?
They walked the Earth 35 million years earlier. ( They walked the Earth 35 million years earlier.

(My coverage of Dr. John Long's recent paper in Nature) 

A single slab from Australia just rewrote history.

- Footprints with claw marks = early reptiles
- 355 million years old = Devonian origin
- Molecular clocks confirm the timeline shift
- This changes when amniotes evolved
- And where they first walked

Not bad for a rock you could carry under one arm! 

Read the full story in the link in bio!
Omg! Thanks!! My newsletter is #30 Rising in Cli Omg! Thanks!! 

My newsletter is #30 Rising in Climate and Environment on Substack!! 🤯
Did leaving academia mean that I gave up my life p Did leaving academia mean that I gave up my life purpose?
Here are 5 things that helped me find a better answer.

1. I stopped seeing “quitting” as failure.
Leaving academia wasn’t giving up.
It was choosing a path that was better for me at that point

2. I let go of the identity trap.
I wasn’t just a scientist.
I was also a storyteller.
A systems thinker.
A human with something to say.

3. I followed the spark.
Writing publicly lit it.
Talking to people outside my field fed it.
Eventually, it grew into Climate Ages.

4. I found meaning in becoming a bridge between science and society.
I started sharing what no one told me:
The behind-the-scenes of the scientific world.
Sharing the human stories behind pipettes and field boots.

5. I realized purpose isn’t a title.
It’s not a job, a grant, or a degree.
Purpose is the connection between your story and someone else’s change or “aha moment.”

I thought I had to stay on the academic path to make an impact.
Turns out, I just had to step off it to build my own path.

Have you left academia or thought about it?
What helped you make peace with it (or what’s holding you back)?
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