
Geoff Brumfiel
Geoff Brumfiel works as a senior editor and correspondent on NPR's science desk. His editing duties include science and space, while his reporting focuses on the intersection of science and national security.
From April of 2016 to September of 2018, Brumfiel served as an editor overseeing basic research and climate science. Prior to that, he worked for three years as a reporter covering physics and space for the network. Brumfiel has carried his microphone into ghost villages created by the Fukushima nuclear accident in Japan. He's tracked the journey of highly enriched uranium as it was shipped out of Poland. For a story on how animals drink, he crouched for over an hour and tried to convince his neighbor's cat to lap a bowl of milk.
Before NPR, Brumfiel was based in London as a senior reporter for Nature Magazine from 2007-2013. There, he covered energy, space, climate, and the physical sciences. From 2002 – 2007, Brumfiel was Nature Magazine's Washington Correspondent.
Brumfiel is the 2013 winner of the Association of British Science Writers award for news reporting on the Fukushima nuclear accident.
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Russia, Iran and China have all attempted to shape the narrative, but so far, their influence has been relatively minor, experts say.
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Some conservative influencers mourned Kirk's loss, even as others quickly blamed the left.
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"The AI Bible is a way to really bring these stories to life in a way that people have never seen before. Think of if we were like, the Marvel Universe of faith," said one of the site's creators.
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A new study finds that AI may be causing some doctors to become less adept at screening for unusual lesions in the colon.
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Movies can tell us a lot about what scares us. And ever since the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the fear of nuclear war has reverberated across decades of film.
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NASA is accelerating plans to have a nuclear reactor on the moon by 2030.
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According to a recent directive from acting NASA administrator Sean Duffy, the space agency will launch a nuclear reactor to the moon by 2030.
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A new study from Oxford University finds that a common European songbird sometimes divorces its partner between breeding seasons.
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A new study from Oxford University finds that a common European songbird sometimes divorces its partner between breeding seasons.
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Iran's nuclear program has been dealt a blow, here's an overview of the current state of its facilities.