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Nature: Can the history of pollution shape a better future?

Posted on September 1, 2020 by Mark Peplow

The poisonous legacy of industry holds lessons, two books show.

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← C&EN: Saliva tests show promise for COVID-19 surveillance at universities and workplaces
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  • Highlights

    • C&EN: Europium complex harvests ambient energy to power minirobots

      20 November 2025

      Inchworms can stroll for hours using scraps of heat from the environment.

    • Nature Biotechnology: Chemistry Nobel materials in the clinic

      14 November 2025

      Human trials using metal–organic frameworks for drug delivery are underway, but challenges remain.

    • C&EN: Trace additive cleans up Fischer-Tropsch synthesis

      31 October 2025

      A dash of bromomethane curbs carbon dioxide emissions from industrial process used to make olefins from syngas.

    • Nature: AI is dreaming up millions of new materials. Are they any good?

      03 October 2025

      Critics slammed attempts by Google, Microsoft and Meta to speed up materials discovery. But behind the hype, there is progress.

    • Nature: How should ‘mirror life’ research be restricted? Debate heats up

      16 September 2025

      Some researchers are calling for strict limits, while others speak out against prematurely halting basic science.

  • TESTIMONIALS

    “As an editor and reporter, Mark Peplow is fast, accurate, and versatile. He covers science policy and pure research with equal passion, and his writing combines a scientist’s precision with a journalist’s verve.” Tim Appenzeller
    Former Chief Magazine Editor at Nature, now News Editor at Science
    "Mark guided me through some of the most challenging stories I've written. These are pieces I might not have attempted were it not for his steady editorial hand." Linda Nordling
    Freelance Journalist, South Africa
    “Working with Mark is never anything other than a pleasure. He is the kind of editor that writers hope for: able to identify what needs fixing and what doesn’t, bringing to bear a wealth of knowledge, always clear, prompt and easy to talk with. Much of that comes from being a splendid writer himself.”
    Philip Ball
    Freelance Science Writer