“We’re all exposed, we’re all at risk.” ––Dr. Frederica Perera, Director, Columbia Center for Children’s Environmental Health, Columbia University; member of the Pure Earth Leadership Council; and Commissioner, Lancet Commission on Pollution and Health.
Where do your food and products come from? Watch their movement around the globe in this series of interactive data visualizations from Carnegie Mellon’s CREATE Lab. To explore the interconnectedness of our global economy interactively, visit PureEarth.org.
Elephants in the wild seem to coordinate their movements even when widely separated. Male elephants seem to be able to find females in estrous even over long distances.