Science Concepts Long-term Thinking The Big Here Digital Dark Age Organizational Continuity Futures Millennial Precedent Archives Long Shorts Long News Projects Announcements Long Now Talks The Clock of the Long Now The Rosetta Project The Interval Long Bets Revive & Restore PanLex Manual For Civilization Disciplines Art Business Cities Civilization Climate Change Computing Culture Economics Energy Environment Evolution Genetics Globalization Government History Infrastructure Language Psychology Science Science Fiction Space Technology Year 02022 02021 02020 02019 02018 02017 02016 02015 02014 02013 02012 02011 02010 02009 02008 02007 02006 02005 02004 OLDER Science California’s Liquid Assets: Tracing the Water that Powers the World’s Sixth-Largest Economy The history and economy of California are inextricably tied to water. Fortunes hinge on where it falls, where it’s diverted to, and who decides how it’s used. By Greg Miller Science The Kilogram is Dead. Long Live the Kilogram! By The Long Now Foundation Revive & Restore A Journey to Siberia in Search of Woolly Mammoths Mammoths will hopefully once again be roaming the steppe, and keeping the tundra safely frozen, after being absent for nearly 10,000 years. By Alexander Rose Long Bets Nick Damiano Wins 10-Year Long Bet that The Large Hadron Collider Wouldn't Destroy Earth By The Long Now Foundation Long-term Thinking Edge Question 02018 By The Long Now Foundation Nevada Bristlecone Preserve Is the Bristlecone Pine in Peril? An Interview with Great Basin Scientist Scotty Strachan "I look at it in terms of long-term science and short-term science." Ahmed Kabil in conversation with Scotty Strachan Science Cassini Ends, but the Search for Life in the Solar System Continues By Ahmed Kabil Genetics Galloping, GIFs and Genes: Geneticists Store Moving Image in Living Bacteria By Ahmed Kabil Archives The Hermit Who Inadvertently Shaped Climate-Change Science Billy Barr's notebooks are one man's archive of more than 4 decades of ecology. By Ahmed Kabil History Göbekli Tepe and the Worst Day in History Technological advances are revolutionizing the field of archaeology, resulting in new discoveries that are upending our previous understanding of the birth of civilization. Many scholars believe that few will be as consequential as Göbekli Tepe. By Ahmed Kabil
Science California’s Liquid Assets: Tracing the Water that Powers the World’s Sixth-Largest Economy The history and economy of California are inextricably tied to water. Fortunes hinge on where it falls, where it’s diverted to, and who decides how it’s used. By Greg Miller
Revive & Restore A Journey to Siberia in Search of Woolly Mammoths Mammoths will hopefully once again be roaming the steppe, and keeping the tundra safely frozen, after being absent for nearly 10,000 years. By Alexander Rose
Long Bets Nick Damiano Wins 10-Year Long Bet that The Large Hadron Collider Wouldn't Destroy Earth By The Long Now Foundation
Nevada Bristlecone Preserve Is the Bristlecone Pine in Peril? An Interview with Great Basin Scientist Scotty Strachan "I look at it in terms of long-term science and short-term science." Ahmed Kabil in conversation with Scotty Strachan
Archives The Hermit Who Inadvertently Shaped Climate-Change Science Billy Barr's notebooks are one man's archive of more than 4 decades of ecology. By Ahmed Kabil
History Göbekli Tepe and the Worst Day in History Technological advances are revolutionizing the field of archaeology, resulting in new discoveries that are upending our previous understanding of the birth of civilization. Many scholars believe that few will be as consequential as Göbekli Tepe. By Ahmed Kabil