Entries for category "Print | Web"
-
wallacejnichols
-
Nov. 1, 2011
-
Wallace J. Nichols writes of Izilwane, "Izilwane means animals in Zulu. Over the years I've seen first-hand how personal experiences with animals have transformed people and deepened their connection to the natural world and each other. Izilwane is also a multimedia platform conceived from an anthropologist's perspective that educates and…
-
wallacejnichols
-
Oct. 19, 2011
-
Scientist. Academic. Watchman. Wallace “J.” Nichols has made a career of protecting the oceans’ interests. Here, Nautica turns a spotlight on Nichols, and his superhero efforts, in order to make a splash for ocean conservation. From one million miles away, our planet looks exactly like a small blue marble. And…
-
wallacejnichols
-
Oct. 11, 2011
-
-
by Anna Fahey, This post is part of the research project: Word on the Street If the ocean has a direct, neurological impact on our brains, an awareness of this connection will change the way we treat it—and the policy implications could be profound. That’s the hope, at least, that…
-
wallacejnichols
-
Oct. 5, 2011
-
Conservationist Wallace "J." Nichols on the Human-Ocean Connection Oceanophilia: The Neuroscience of Emotion and the Ocean "We can use science to explore and understand the profound and ancient emotional connections that lead to deeper relationships with the ocean. I believe that if we do, we have an opportunity for real…
-
wallacejnichols
-
Oct. 3, 2011
-
By JEFF GREENWALD About two-thirds of the body is made of what is essentially seawater. But our relationship to the deep, believes biologist Wallace J. Nichols, may be more than chemical: Our minds are also linked to the ocean, he says, in some surprising -- even game-changing -- ways. Nichols’…