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Bright Lit Place
NPR
7 episodes
2 months ago
When the U.S. government and state of Florida unveiled a new plan to save the Everglades in 2000, the sprawling blueprint to restore the wetlands became the largest hydrological restoration effort in the nation's history. Two decades later, only one project is complete, and the Everglades is still dying. Bright Lit Place heads into the swamp to meet its first inhabitants, the scientists who study it and the warring sides struggling to find a way out of the muck.
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Earth Sciences
News,
Politics,
Science
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All content for Bright Lit Place is the property of NPR and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
When the U.S. government and state of Florida unveiled a new plan to save the Everglades in 2000, the sprawling blueprint to restore the wetlands became the largest hydrological restoration effort in the nation's history. Two decades later, only one project is complete, and the Everglades is still dying. Bright Lit Place heads into the swamp to meet its first inhabitants, the scientists who study it and the warring sides struggling to find a way out of the muck.
Show more...
Earth Sciences
News,
Politics,
Science
https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2023/11/27/episode-3--jeant_sq-90e4605eb73041cb77cdf219915b941eb38edbc4.jpg?s=3000&c=66&f=jpg
The Reverse Farm
Bright Lit Place
40 minutes
1 year ago
The Reverse Farm
Bright Lit Place
When the U.S. government and state of Florida unveiled a new plan to save the Everglades in 2000, the sprawling blueprint to restore the wetlands became the largest hydrological restoration effort in the nation's history. Two decades later, only one project is complete, and the Everglades is still dying. Bright Lit Place heads into the swamp to meet its first inhabitants, the scientists who study it and the warring sides struggling to find a way out of the muck.