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Word: earthly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...most of the issues that we grapple with, climate change is global," said Roberts. "The pressure is on us to do the right thing." If shutting off the lights for an hour on a Saturday night and doing yoga in the dark makes that political support, well, visible, then Earth Hour will have been worth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Earth Hour '08: Did It Matter? | 3/27/2008 | See Source »

...environmental movement is reaching a delicate moment. We're well past the point where going green is novel, where just doing your bit to save the Earth deserves endless praise. We've become inured to the existence of global warming, to its inconvenient truth, yet we sense that the solutions we've been given - change a light bulb, change your life - fall far short of the scale of the problem. We risk green fatigue because, after all, what can we do about it? But this is the moment when we need to keep pushing in every...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Earth Hour '08: Did It Matter? | 3/27/2008 | See Source »

...spirit in "the place where all the souls of Mongolian wolves that had died in battles over the millennia congregated." One is left wondering if millions of Chinese readers also believe that freedom only waits in heaven, or if they feel it to be something worth striving for on earth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pack Man | 3/27/2008 | See Source »

...crib it isn't. But for every ton of rock pried from the earth, two grams of gold will be produced. Last year the Dayingezhuang mine turned out 78,000 ounces of gold, worth more than $78 million at the current price of around $1,000 an ounce. There's more ore where that came from. The mine's operator, Hong Kong-listed Zhaojin Mining Industry Co., expects to get 80,000 ounces from Dayinggezhuang this year. It's a story that is playing out at thousands of other Chinese gold mines that, with metal prices soaring, are ramping...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Glitter Factory | 3/27/2008 | See Source »

...country is merely regaining its former glory. The Chinese have been pulling gold from the earth since the Song dynasty 1,000 years ago. But after the communist takeover in 1949, mining went dormant for decades. Personal ownership of gold was banned as a bourgeois extravagance, and production rarely broke 20 tons a year. That started to change with economic reform in the 1990s. Small wildcat operations began to proliferate, and these relatively unsophisticated outfits dominate the sector today. While countries such as South Africa, Australia, the U.S. and Canada get most of their production from a few dozen large...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Glitter Factory | 3/27/2008 | See Source »

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