As Independence Day approaches, Utahns are preparing to celebrate the nation's birth with dazzling displays of light and color. However, a new BYU study published in Applied Geochemistry warns that these festivities come with an often-overlooked hazard: increased air pollution.
Read Also
- Fiio’s reboot of the Walkman no longer hides those glorious cassettes
- The Samsung Galaxy Watch 6 has a $90 price cut — this week only!
- Ring Pan-Tilt Indoor Cam review: spinning in circles
- 3 great Netflix dramas to watch on the 4th of July
- Nintendo ends Wii U repairs
- Strawberries under the high-tech magnifying glass
- Best Buy is selling this Lenovo laptop for just $150 today
- It’s No Mystery Why Ridley Scott’s Alien Is a Masterpiece
- Kia EV9 review: Everything I want in a three-row family EV
- Phage viruses, used to treat antibiotic resistance, gain advantage by cutting off competitors' reproduction ability
Latest phys
- Strawberries under the high-tech magnifying glass
- Phage viruses, used to treat antibiotic resistance, gain advantage by cutting off competitors' reproduction ability
- Study reveals rapid evolution and global spread of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Recovery of unique geological samples sheds light on formation of today's Antarctic ice sheet
- 'I pretty much already know what Australia's like': What Aussie teenagers told researchers about not watching local TV
- AI could revolutionize environmental planning—if we don't get trapped in the 'iron cage of rationality'
- No croutons, no anchovies, no bacon: The 100-year-old Mexican origins of the Caesar salad
- Using copper to convert CO₂ to methane could be game changer in mitigating climate change
- Study reveals latitude patterns, controlling factors of microbial residues and lignin phenol accumulation in forest soil
- Hurricane Beryl sweeps past Cayman Islands after hammering Jamaica