This science writer has seen Earth’s most amazing places. Here’s what she’s learned.


这位科学作家见证了地球上最令人惊叹的场所。以下是她的所学所获。

Apple News In Conversation

2026-01-23

24 分钟
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New Yorker staff writer Elizabeth Kolbert has been reporting on climate and the environment for more than 25 years. In her work, she captures both the awe-inspiring beauty of the natural world and the unsettling truth about what humans are doing to it. Her latest book, Life on a Little-Known Planet: Dispatches From a Changing World, is a collection of essays from her decades-long career. Kolbert spoke with Apple News In Conversation host Shumita Basu about the stories that have shaped her reporting — and what they’ve taught her about a rapidly changing planet.
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  • This is In Conversation from Apple News.

  • I'm Shamita Basu.

  • Today,

  • the Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer reflects on what she's learned about our changing planet.

  • Elizabeth Colbert knows that in order to tell the story of our changing planet and the scientists who study it,

  • you need to experience it firsthand.

  • I've gotten to see some of the most ecologically spectacular places on our planet,

  • the Amazon rainforest, the Great Barrier Reef, the cloud forest in the Andes, just amazing places.

  • She's been doing this very hands-on kind of science writing for the New Yorker for more than 25 years.

  • And she manages to capture both this awestruck attitude toward the world and the unsettling truth about what humans are doing to it.

  • Our science is so marvelous and reckless, and we can really see into cells,

  • and we can see into DNA, we can see beyond cells, you know, to molecules and atoms.

  • And at the same time, we are just sort of willy-nilly wrecking a lot of the planet.

  • Elizabeth explores that tension in her new book,

  • Life on a Little Known Planet, Dispatches from a Changing World.

  • It's a collection of some of her essays that she's written over the years,

  • where she introduces us to intrepid researchers exploring pressing questions like,

  • could AI help us communicate with sperm whales?

  • And do bodies of water have legal rights?

  • We started by talking about one of the first essays in her book,