That combination may be tough to find in lush new england but is common on solar panels like those at the arboretum s hunnewell building where it was discovered.
Arnold arboretum solar panels.
The weld hill solar project currently underway is the arnold arboretum s third and largest solar project and harvard s most ambitious sustainability initiative to date with nearly 1 300 solar panels powering a 45 000 square foot science laboratory and teaching facility in roslindale.
The arboretum will draw up to 30 percent of its energy needs for weld hill via 1 152 ground mounted solar panels and a 145 panel solar awning once the project is completed this fall while certainly the weld hill solar project marks the institution s most ambitious sustainability initiative to date it s not the first of its kind at the arnold arboretum.
While talk about sustainability often comes in the form of discussions about steel straws and reusable tote bags there are lots of larger scale initiatives looking to promote sustainability and fight the effects of climate change.
The new species is marked by the presence of colorful carotenoid pigments and an affinity for solar radiation high temperatures limited nutrients and desiccation.
A new species of bacteria one that makes its home on the relatively hot and dry surface of a solar panel was discovered recently at the arnold arboretum offering a lesson that nature s reach extends even to the artificial.
May 8 2019 harvard s arnold arboretum is undertaking an ambitious sustainability initiative to install more than 1 000 solar panels near the weld hill research building which houses affiliated.
One such initiative is the arnold arboretum s installation of 1 000 plus solar panels.
August 4 2020 never before seen bacterium found at arnold arboretum by alvin powell harvard university researchers kristie tanner foreground and olga mayoral collecting samples from the solar.
Education at the weld hill research building.
A new species of bacteria has been discovered living on solar panels atop the arnold arboretum at harvard university which is interesting unless it starts to eat the panels or do something like.
The harvard gazette reports a researcher has discovered a new bacterium on solar panels atop the arnold arboretum s hunnewell building.
In 2019 the arboretum broke ground on the weld hill solar project which contains 1 297 solar panels generates more than 25 of the energy required annually to support research and education at the weld hill research building contains a unique battery storage array to reduce peak demand on the local electrical grid and keeps the equivalent of 401 metric tons of carbon out of the atmosphere each year.