Industrial designers Juan Noguera, RIT, and Tom Weis, RISD, redesign the infamous “Doomsday Clock” for the ‘Bulletin of the ...
The Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance gathered in Market Square on Jan. 28 to spread awareness of the Doomsday Clock, a symbolic meas ...
The Doomsday Clock has been set to 89 seconds to midnight, marking the closest it has ever been to global catastrophe in its ...
As the Doomsday Clock ticks dangerously close to midnight, humanity faces escalating nuclear threats, climate disasters, and ...
The Doomsday Clock has been used to examine the world’s vulnerability to global catastrophe for nearly a century.
The Doomsday Clock shows the global community faces the three-headed catastrophe of global warming, pandemics and nuclear ...
Will the world ever be free of the menace of nuclear annihilation? There was a promising start along these lines during the late twentieth century, ...
The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, marking humanity’s failure to address nuclear risks, climate change, ...
WASHINGTON -The doomsday clock, symbolizing how close humanity is to destruction, ticked one second closer to midnight ...
You can stop a clock from ticking, but it's a lot harder to figure out how to stop humanity's relentless march toward self-annihilation.
NASA scientists have discovered organic content in the samples recovered from the asteroid Bennu, which points back to the ...
In a statement outlining the change, the Board highlighted three main reasons for “moving the Doomsday Clock from 90 seconds to 89 seconds to midnight.” These include ongoing nuclear risks, ...