Science
We Asked for Environmental Fixes in Your State. You Sent In Thousands.
It’s been a tough year for the environment. And yet, people all over the country are working hard to reduce greenhouse gases, reverse the harms of pollution, save imperiled species and restore pockets of nature. In our 50 States, 50 Fixes series this year we featured one success story from every state.
We also asked readers to share eco-friendly projects, big and small, underway in their communities. More than 3,200 submissions poured in, 14 of which we featured.
As 2025 draws to an end, we’re highlighting just a few more of the ideas that stood out but that did not make it into the series.
The following submissions have been edited and condensed.
— Cara Buckley and Catrin Einhorn
Looking out for the little guys
I’ve been rescuing bugs from the trap of nighttime lighting, like the ones that flew into my aunt’s house last night when the doors were open, drawn in by the glow. Sometimes I can save 20 in an hour. It’s thrilling. It’s empowering.
And it makes you wonder: Why are we even here, if we’re letting animals die simply because we don’t notice them? If there’s one place you can be a hero, it’s your own house, your own backyard. You can save so many animals just by paying attention. It’s really a mindset shift.There’s so much magic in our neighborhoods. So much heartbreak, too. But wow, definitely some magic. — Nicola Plowman, California
Greening the homeowner association
Our large homeowner association in Irving, Texas, has recently earned the National Wildlife Federation’s Community Wildlife Habitat certification. We switched to native plantings in nine parks and 20 common areas, converted four acres to native pollinator-friendly wildflowers and grasses, planted native trees and installed dark sky public lighting. We also educate residents, who have now certified 135 individual homes and a commercial property. Volunteers with the Valley Ranch Association’s green club did it with help and funding from the federal government, national nonprofits, local businesses, our H.O.A. and private donors. Our community is working hard to protect our urban wildlife and pollinators. — Nancy Payne, Texas
A Nebraska-shaped solution
The Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District
When we say Mary Bergstrom plants Nebraska, we mean that literally! Mary created a pollinator garden in the shape of Nebraska, including a walking path through the middle of the garden that replicates how the Platte River winds its way through the state.
Featuring 27 species of plants, flowers and grasses, many native to the Great Plains region, the garden, which was made possible by a 2023 grant from the PlantNebraska foundation, provides food and habitat to a legion of pollinators, from the monarchs that travel through Nebraska on their migration from Canada to Mexico, to native bees and more. Mary, who lives on the shores of Johnson Lake, Neb., spent 20 years as a librarian at Lexington High School and said she wanted to create a garden that could be a geography lesson, too.
— Michelle DeRusha, Nebraska
Protecting a pair of piping plovers
Chicago’s motto is “city in a garden,” but our cutest conservation success story has to do with two federally endangered piping plovers, Monty and Rose (named after Montrose Beach, where they nested). After settling on the beach in 2019 they were spotted by birders, and a little spit of land was protected for them to breed. They became the first successful pair of piping plovers to breed in the city in 71 years, and their offspring became famous, too.
— Rebecca Silverman, Illinois
In 2021, the Chicago Park District expanded the protected natural habitat around the plovers’ nesting ground by 3.1 acres, an area that was renamed the Monty and Rose Wildlife Habitat last year.
Planting an urban forest
Tree Fredericksburg is an organization of citizen volunteers dedicated to the restoration of the urban forest in Fredericksburg, Va. Since 2008, we have planted over 10,000 trees along the street, in the parks and in the schoolyard. We have also given away over 60,000 native trees and shrubs to the general public. Last fall, an inventory of the trees in the city was conducted and it showed that Tree Fredericksburg is responsible for 47 percent of the trees now growing in the city in the public right of way.
Volunteers have come from all walks of life, including Scouts, students from the local schools and university, churches, civic associations and even from as far away as Northern Virginia. We have had students from George Mason University and the local mosque in Manassas, Va.
We believe trees to be the answer for many problems in our city: the heat island effect, stormwater management, walkable city streets and just plain beauty. There was no city arborist from 2008 to 2023 and so Tree Fredericksburg was the de facto arborist for our city. We have had a strong partnership with the city of Fredericksburg and great support from our political leaders. We have been a Tree City for 37 years. — Anne Little, Virginia
Bringing buffalo back
For over three decades, I’ve run the Black Feather Buffalo Ranch on 3,000 leased acres in Oglala Lakota County, S.D., on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Named after John Black Feather, who entrusted me with this legacy, the ranch represents far more than a business. It’s a living testament to our Lakota heritage, a way of bringing our people back to our most sacred relatives, the buffalo. In the past few years, I’ve invested in new fencing to create a rotational grazing structure. Traditional, Native methods also encouraged buffalo to move around the land. Now it’s classified as a climate-smart activity by the U.S.D.A. When I look out over my herd, I think of my ancestral knowledge, and the generational knowledge my elders, including my uncle John Black Feather, passed down to me: that buffalo represent abundance and hope.
Each animal represents a living connection to our past and a promise for our future. As a single parent raising both my children and my buffalo, I’m proud to continue this sacred work. I wish my uncle was alive to see how much our herd has grown, how we’re bringing our buffalo back and we’re keeping our culture alive, one buffalo at a time.
— Virgil Two Eagle, South Dakota
Installing solar in low-income places
Southern Energy Management
In North Carolina, we are U.N.C. students who created the nonprofit SolarEquity to bring affordable renewable energy to low- to moderate-income communities. In the Southeast, it is difficult to implement renewable energy in affordable ways due to regulations and utility constraints, so we decided to be the intermediary between communities, affordable housing organizations and financial entities to bring solar and energy efficiency to places often left out of the energy transition, while decreasing carbon emissions.
— Kaya Johnson, North Carolina
Planting pollinators
Skateport is a rollerskating events and lessons service based in Connecticut. We had concrete poured in the heart of downtown in order to place a shipping container onsite to house our rental roller skates and decided to plant a public pollinator garden to offset the heat island effect and support our local ecosystem and pollinators!
— Takina Pollock Shafer, Connecticut
Celebrating the natural world
Procession of the Species Celebration is a 30-year-old event that highlights community-made art to celebrate and appreciate nature. Each year, the community has a parade or procession that includes floats, live music and dancing, with large-format art of different species. It was started by Earthbound Productions and is organized by the community. Leading up to the event, there are two months of free and open studios and workshops to create the collective artwork. Art, culture and community are essential in fostering an ethic of environmental stewardship and protection.
— Natalie Weiss, Washington
Teaching climate change in business class
Mike Belleme for The New York Times Appalachian State is now requiring all undergraduates to take at least one class in the sustainability and climate literacy arena as a general education requirement. I teach the Walker College of Business’s version of the class. I really want my opening line to be in The N.Y. Times lol: “This class is not to discuss whether we think climate change is real or not, or who is to blame, that is a waste of oxygen. This class’s charge is to come up with better business processes to not treat the Earth like shit.”
— Scott Bowie Gray, North Carolina
Recycling rainwater
Brad Lancaster in Tucson, Ariz., has, for 30 years, advocated for and installed citywide rainwater harvesting infrastructure and planted thousands of trees native to the Sonoran Desert. The savings in deferred groundwater use run to the millions of gallons per year.
— Eric Wagner, Arizona
Mr. Lancaster said he’s helped neighbors plant more than 1,800 native food-bearing trees and thousands of understory plants, which are irrigated by more than one million gallons of stormwater harvested annually from neighborhood rain gardens.
Decomposing yard signs
In Berkeley, Calif., Berkeley High School parents and families stopped receiving lawn signs for free when their seniors graduated earlier this year. As a result, a group of parents began selling eco-friendly seed paper signs, which decompose and grow into native flowers after it rains, unlike typical plastic lawn signs. The idea for a biodegradable sign started with an opinion article in the high school newspaper, and the signs were sold to hundreds of parents and families in the district. It’s an idea that’s very small and the families hope it will incite a bigger movement.
— Sydney Lehrer, California
Ron Levi, a parent of a recently graduated senior, spearheaded the effort, and said leftover proceeds from the sale of the signs went to a nonprofit parent group that raises funds for the school.
Reducing fire risk
In Oakland, Calif., volunteers are busy reducing the risk of fire while restoring the open spaces. Parts of the hills here are classified as a high fire hazard zone where the forests are packed with overgrown underbrush and deadwood. But these open spaces are also beloved green oases in this highly urban city, used by thousands of bikers, hikers and picnickers. They need care, but the city doesn’t have the capacity to properly maintain them.
A nonprofit called Friends of Sausal Creek musters up scores of volunteers every weekend to steward multiple locations in the parks, removing invasive plants and shrubs, planting native plants, reducing the fire risks and maintaining Sausal Creek, where a small population of wild trout lives.
— Wendy Tokuda, California
Sharing vegan delights
I write a vegan recipe and educational column called Recipe for a Healthy Planet for our local newspaper, The Monadnock Ledger-Transcript. I worked on a web portal of the same name for our local environmental education center, the Harris Center. We’re educating people about how food choices affect the environment.
— Lisa Murray, New Hampshire
Building without gas
In terms of decarbonizing buildings, everybody despairs about getting America’s builders, HVAC contractors and homeowners to accept electrification. There are so many people to persuade! A big New Mexico developer has figured it out: He doesn’t put gas infrastructure into his new developments in the city of Las Cruces, which saves him millions of dollars in unnecessary infrastructure. Just like that, a development is on the path to being 100 percent decarbonized. He is in the middle of a 6,000-lot housing project now, with homes selling out quickly. He can’t figure out why more developers aren’t doing it.
— Don Kurtz, New Mexico
The developer, John Moscato, said not adding gas lines to developments saved him $3,000 per lot.
Running from plastic
I have been a runner for over 50 years. The vast majority of plastic is not recycled, and I don’t like the single-use plastic bottles given at races. I have been trying to get races to use paper cups with water canisters instead. Some smaller races in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania have made progress, like the Scott Coffee Moorestown 8K, the Cooper Norcross Run the Bridge 10K and the Finger Lakes Runners Club’s Twilight 5K. I have tried to get the Broad Street 10 miler in Philadelphia to give up plastic, as it would save nearly 100,000 plastic water bottles from the landfill or ocean. I speak to race directors at every race I attend.
I am 86.
— Sandra Folzer, Pennsylvania
This year, Ms. Folzer became the world record holder for women aged 85-90 in the indoor mile.
Keeping textiles out of the landfill
I thought you might be interested in a project near me in Kent, Ohio. It’s called The Socially Responsible Sweatshop of Kent. From their flier: “The Socially Responsible Sweatshop is committed to repurposing landfill-destined textiles into useful, beautiful items. These items are lovingly crafted and priced affordably. Proceeds from the sales of these items are donated to provide extra funds for food-insecure community members.”
They sell their wares at the Haymaker Farmers’ Market in Kent year round and online and a couple of local stores. I discovered this organization at the farmers’ market about a year and a half ago and ended up donating my late mother’s sewing machine to them. I have since donated fabric and other machines and sewing supplies when I can. Last year they raised $50,000, 100 percent of which went to the food-insecure of Portage County.
— Kyle A. Klever, Ohio
Grabbing trash on the go
Heidi Cramer/Piscataway Public Library I’m writing on behalf of my friend, Douglas Johnston, who lives in Piscataway, N.J. An avid hiker, Doug serves his community and his environment by picking up trash from the trails. He never leaves the house without a trash bag and grabber. Doug knows I’m submitting this; he’s too humble to do it himself. He’s making a difference quietly.
— Kate Baker, New Jersey
Doug also picks up trash around Piscataway, often pulling over to clean up garbage from roadsides, and said he needs to wash out his car a lot.
Eating invasive species
Young, small-operation Rhode Island fishermen are fighting the European Green Crab invasion, spearheading new legislation and encouraging everyone to get out there and trap the crabs. A bill to create a more affordable, accessible license to commercially harvest the green crabs passed the R.I. General Assembly unanimously, and I, a 17-year-old, proposed it! The restaurant demand for the crabs is growing in the state, and there are a few fishermen leading the charge.
— Liam Cromie, Rhode Island
Imitating beaver dams
We are a small group of fly fishers concerned about cold, clean water. We have constructed more than 100 beaver dam analogues to keep more water on the landscape. These B.D.A.s not only store, cool and spread water but also provide habitat for many species of animals and plants.
— William Young, South Dakota
Pivoting careers
I left my cushy tech job at Adobe this spring to open a native plant nursery. In Utah, we are way behind the rest of the country when it comes to environmentally conscious landscaping. Kentucky bluegrass lawns continue to dominate residential landscapes even though we live in a high desert. I’ve only been in business for six months but I’ve already made over $100,000 in gross sales. I believe Utahns are ready and businesses like mine are emerging to meet the growing demand.
— Sara Southwick, Utah
Fighting for marine forests
In an effort to protect the coastline, Sebastian Ford, a high school student from Bainbridge Island, Wash., worked with the Seattle Aquarium, the Puget Sound Restoration Fund and tribes to raise awareness of bull kelp and get it designated as the state’s “marine forest.” His work became House Bill 1631 and was signed into law on April 16. He was also named Washingtonian of the day.
— Rebecca Robins, Washington
Sebastian Ford is the grandson of the reader who sent in this submission.
𓆑
Science
Shipwreck Reveals Fate of Vanished World War I Coast Guard Cutter
The sea was stormy on Sept. 26, 1918, as a convoy of merchant ships navigated the Bristol Channel in southern England. Escorting them was the Tampa, a 190-foot U.S. Coast Guard cutter with the mission of protecting the boats from German submarines.
The cutter separated from the convoy in the misty night to take on supplies and coal at a port. And then it disappeared. For more than a century, its fate has been an enduring naval mystery of World War I.
This week, British divers announced that the wreck of the Tampa had at last been found, nestled 320 feet deep in murky waters about 50 miles off the Cornish coast.
A torpedo from a German submarine killed all those aboard the cutter: 111 Coast Guardsmen, four U.S. Navy personnel and 15 British Navy personnel and civilians.
Adm. Kevin Lunday, commandant of the Coast Guard, said that the Tampa was the largest single American naval combat loss of life in World War I and that it had left “an enduring grief in our service.”
The discovery was the culmination of a three-year effort by the Gasperados Dive Team, a group of British explorers and researchers. They combed shipping logs and wartime messages, and collaborated with the Coast Guard to pinpoint the path and resting place of the vanished vessel.
Barbara Mortimer, a Gasperados researcher, collated scraps of information, sometimes single lines of text that by themselves offered little to go on. But once all the information was meticulously pieced together, she and her teammates narrowed the search to an area clustered with thousands of wrecks from warships, commercial ships and fishing vessels lost over centuries.
The timeline of the Tampa’s final moments slowly emerged.
“Urgent. Priority,” said a telegram dated Sept. 27, 1918, sent to the admiralty in London. “USS Tampa detached herself from convoy.”
The telegram provided the longitude and latitude of that last sighting. At 7 p.m., the ship was seen on the horizon, steering toward the port of Milford Haven, it said. At 8:45 p.m., a wireless operator “felt the shock of an underwater explosion,” the telegram said.
Then, in the hours that followed, Milford Haven reported that the Tampa was 12 hours overdue for its scheduled arrival.
The research team assembled a number of clues about where the Tampa ended up.
One telegram said a seaplane had spotted a “considerable wreckage” field of seven to eight square miles. Two bodies, in Tampa uniforms, eventually washed ashore and were buried in Wales, Ms. Mortimer said in an interview. She said the researchers also studied German U-boat records.
The Coast Guard provided historical records, technical data and archival images of the ship’s features so divers knew what to look for in the deep.
In April 2023, the team made its first two dives looking for the Tampa. Seven more followed, and an assortment of shipwrecks were spotted and examined.
On Sunday they zeroed in on an area where a British hydrographic survey had noted a “significant magnetic anomaly” suggesting the possible location of a steel wreck.
That information was checked against convoy records, Ms. Mortimer said. The team decided, “It’s worth a look,” she said. But she added, “I did not have high expectations.”
Dominic Robinson, one of the team’s divers, lowered himself into the cold, dark waters of the Celtic Sea in the late afternoon of April 26.
At about 311 feet down, he spotted wreckage, piled high. As he drifted slowly over the debris field, his light picked up objects from the chaotic jumble. Some stood out: There was a brass fire extinguisher, an anchor, shell casings and a high-pressure steam boiler that was used in the engines of ships like the Tampa.
Surveying the mound, Mr. Robinson said in an interview that he had a “gut feeling” that the ship had been blown apart, making the bow crumble and absorb the impact. “And the rest of the ship settled down behind it,” he said.
Then he drifted over some crockery. Another member of the team, Jacob MacKenzie, found a similar piece that was inscribed with the maker’s mark: “New Jersey.”
They had an “American connection,” Mr. Robinson said.
“That instantly connects me with the people on the ship,” he said in a video of the dive. “They would have eaten out of those bowls. All these people would have had parents, would have had nearest and dearest, and none of them knew where they are.”
The Coast Guard is gathering data from the Gasperados’ finds to confirm it as an officially designated war grave, said William H. Thiesen, the Coast Guard’s Atlantic area historian.
The Coast Guard has been contacting the families of each lost Tampa crew member over many years, awarding them a posthumous Purple Heart medal, Mr. Thiesen said.
“It provides closure to a chapter that has been open for 100 years,” he said.
Jeremy Davids, 48, of Florida said that a relative, Wesley James Nobles, died while serving aboard the Tampa at the age of 20.
“Drowned foreign waters sinking of Tampa 9-26-1918,” the official record of Mr. Nobles’ death says. Mr. Nobles had a rating of “boy,” an enlisted rank for younger crew members.
“It feels good knowing the fact that not only him but the other soldiers who lost their lives that day can finally rest in peace,” Mr. Davids said in an interview.
Science
Bald eagle ‘massaging’ its mate? AI deepfakes collide with the laws of the wild
Shadow gingerly places one taloned foot, then the other, on Jackie as she hunkers down on the nest.
With Big Bear Lake glittering in the distance, he raises each foot in a kneading motion — evoking a bald eagle massage.
“Somehow, it says everything about their bond,” reads the caption on the 15-second video posted to Facebook.
It looks tender. It looks real.
It isn’t.
The clip is AI-generated.
Jackie and Shadow — made world-famous by a 24-hour livestream — aren’t the only animals falsely depicted in deepfakes. AI wildlife videos have flooded social media platforms like YouTube, Instagram and TikTok, racking up millions of views and likes. Some are whimsical, like a handful of bunnies hopping on a trampoline. Others take a more menacing tone, like a jaguar facing off with a dog in a snowy backyard.
Far from benign, some experts say the videos can skew how people view and even interact with wildlife — potentially leading to perilous encounters. They may also undermine viewers’ growing desire to tune into nature to escape the frenetic rhythms of daily life. Repeated exposure could erode trust in media and institutions generally, with one Reddit user proclaiming, “Can’t even watch real animal videos because 90% of them are AI.” There are also legal implications.
The deception works because the depictions are often hyperrealistic. Even a producer for the Dodo, an animal-centric media outlet, admitted to falling for the bouncing bunnies. Often the videos appear to be ripped from trail or security cameras, enhancing vibes of authenticity. In the competitive economy for people’s attention, the videos can help win looks and likes, potentially driving ad revenue for those who post them.
Megan Brief, a digital marketing coordinator for Natural Habitat Adventures, an ecotourism company, had just returned from Svalbard, a far-flung Norwegian archipelago teeming with polar bears and walruses.
Her social media feed piled up with video after video of polar bear rescues, such as fishermen or scientists hauling a freezing, struggling baby polar bear onto a ship. On board, people snapped selfies with the cub before reuniting it with its mom.
She knew they were fake because she was well-versed in the behavior of the snow-white predators, which are fiercely protective of cubs. As the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service warns, these “large, powerful carnivores” can easily injure or kill people. It would also be illegal to intervene.
But thousands of commenters took what they saw at face value.
(Photo illustration by Jim Cooke / Los Angeles Times; Source photo / Getty Images)
“It shows that you can have this close proximity with wildlife that is not only dangerous to you, but it’s dangerous to the animal,” said Brief, who is also a wildlife photographer. Social media is filled with AI animal rescues of all types.
“That’s everyone’s dream, to be one with all the animals and with wildlife,” she added, “but you have to respect their habitat and their behavior and give them the space that they need.”
On the flip side, she said the videos also can perpetuate myths that predators such as wolves and mountain lions are more dangerous than they actually are. It’s easy to see how videos could inflame heated debates over managing such animals, in California and beyond.
In a paper published last September in “Conservation Biology,” researchers said the videos also can make people think animals are more abundant, or less threatened, than they are. They might donate or volunteer less as a result.
“If the public is unable to distinguish between actual threats to biodiversity and fictionalized narratives, the perceived urgency to act may diminish,” the researchers wrote.
Jenny Voisard, media and website manager for Friends of Big Bear Valley, a nonprofit that operates cameras trained on Jackie and Shadow, said her inbox is overloaded with complaints about AI content. Grifters are nothing new — the nonprofit has long contended with fake accounts — but they’ve evolved with the technology.
People who follow the beloved eagles are fed more content about them by the algorithm, and she said AI rises to the top of the feed. (That seems to explain why this reporter is often served the fakes when opening Facebook.)
“People get very upset when they see someone depicting Jackie and Shadow in an unnatural way or wrong, or when it looks like they could be in danger,” said Voisard. Some clips showed owls and ravens attacking the couple, especially riling up fans.
The nonprofit recently trademarked its name and is in the process of copyrighting its livestream. She said the point is to protect what they create, such as merchandise and a detailed log of what the eagles are up to, from fakers.
However, ownership in the age of AI is fraught. Voisard said their livestream can be copyrighted because it’s not just a fixed camera; humans operate it and make choices, like zooming in.
Kristelia García, a professor at Georgetown Law, said such creative choices do give livestream operators a good claim to copyright. Whether something violates it is another matter.
If someone asks a large language model to create a three-minute video featuring eagles without drawing on copyrighted material, no harm no foul, she said. But if they feed the AI program the nonprofit’s footage and ask it to manipulate it, that could make for an infringement claim.
But would it be worth fighting? “Copyright litigation is really expensive and very unpredictable,” said García, who focuses on copyright law. She suspects that only if a lot of money were at stake would a nonprofit be willing to take the risk.
As for concerns about misinformation, “we don’t really have a legal recourse for, like, ‘You got fooled,’” she said. Famous people enjoy certain protections over their name, image and likeness, but famous animals don’t.
The fake video of Shadow “massaging” Jackie casts the eagles in a positive light. It arguably perpetuates the avian love story that Friends of Big Bear Valley describes in its own posts.
Yet Voisard believes people are increasingly tuning into animal livestreams to escape artificiality. Ironically, AI may drive people toward real nature precisely because it can’t replicate it.
“The livestream isn’t being in nature, but it’s the closest thing that a lot of people get,” she said. “Being outside is the best thing for us and our health and our well-being and making that connection. To me, AI is not that.”
Science
How Running Shoes Have Evolved, From Ancient Greece to a Record-Breaking Marathon Time
When the messenger Pheidippides ran from the battlefield of Marathon to Athens to announce the Greek victory over the Persians in the 5th century B.C., he did it without shoes. His time was not officially tracked.
Millenniums later, at the London Marathon on Sunday, Sabastian Sawe and Yomif Kejelcha became the first to break the two-hour barrier in an official marathon, and Tigist Assefa set a women’s world record. All three did it in featherweight footwear.
The shoe, the Adidas Adizero Adios Pro Evo 3, weighs 97 grams, or about 3.4 ounces, depending on the shoe size. It’s the lightest running sneaker approved for competition. It sold out on Monday.
The race to near-weightlessness has been a driving force of innovation in running sneakers in the 25 centuries since shoeless Pheidippides’s run.
Heavier shoes are slower, a 2016 study showed, although that analysis was only for three-kilometer time trials. The study’s authors hid lead pellets in some Nike racing shoes and didn’t tell the subjects.
“When we added 100 grams per shoe, they ran about 1 percent slower, and when we added 300 grams, they ran about 3 percent slower,” said Rodger Kram, an emeritus professor of integrative physiology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He called the 1 percent per 100 grams “a rule of toe.”
But it took many steps before running shoes evolved to the blistering pace they now allow.
‘The Platonic ideal’
Shoes once relied on leather, wood or metal reinforcements that were heavy and stiff. The rise of the rubber sole added flexibility and waterproofing. Better durability and grip were bonuses.
People could also run or walk in rubber soles without being heard. That’s why they’re called sneakers.
The first flat-soled rubber and canvas shoe was developed in 1868, almost 30 years after Charles Goodyear discovered the process of curing rubber called vulcanization. Converse and Keds made them popular in the 1920s.
“Converse All Stars are the Platonic ideal of the sneaker,” said Nicholas Smith, the author of “Kicks: The Great American Story of Sneakers.”
He noted they have not changed much.
“Canvas on top, rubber at the bottom.”
‘Chariots of Fire’
Competitive runners soon faced a trade-off: a heavier shoe with better traction or a lighter flat sole.
The heavier option, which transferred maximum force from the runner’s foot to the ground for acceleration, came from J.W. Foster of Bolton, England, who had the insight that led to the first metal spikes in shoes in the 1890s. Top British runners, including those competing in the 1924 Paris Olympics, wore these new spikes to notch their fastest times. Their story is told in “Chariots of Fire,” the Oscar-winning 1981 film.
It was at another Olympics, in Berlin, that Jesse Owens wore six-spiked shoes created by Adidas to become the most successful runner of the 1936 Games. His shoes, made of specially tanned calf leather and cowhide, weighed 201 grams.
A broken waffle iron
Running tracks made of urethane, a rubber compound, began to emerge in the 1960s. When one was installed in 1969 at the University of Oregon, the track coach, Bill Bowerman, found that runners’ spikes dug in too deep while flat shoes offered too little traction.
Having breakfast one morning in 1971, he noticed that the grid pattern on the waffle iron his wife was using might just be what his runners needed to get a grip on the track.
He tried pouring liquid urethane into the waffle iron, but only managed to seal it shut. He kept trying other waffle irons until he had the mold he wanted, according to Nike archivists.
But Bowerman wanted more than grippier sneakers.
“He was also devoted to making the lightest running shoe possible,” said Elizabeth Semmelhack, the author of “Out of the Box: The Rise of Sneaker Culture.”
Bowerman’s shoe, which Nike called the Waffle Trainer, “stands out because it had an extremely thin rubber sole but with a high tread, and then the upper of the shoe was made out of nylon.”
The light weight also helped bring running to the masses.
“You can bet there wouldn’t be so many people running today if they had to carry all the extra baggage we had back then,” Bowerman, a Nike co-founder, said in 1979.
The waffle-pattern nubs on the soles compressed under weight and helped bring spring to a runner’s step. But they only hinted at how sneakers could be cushioned. For many runners, it was not enough.
Then Nike introduced ethylene-vinyl acetate, better known as EVA foam, on the heel of its Cortez shoe in 1972. EVA offered a thicker, air-infused layer of separation from the road and absorbed more of the shock. The age of adding thick slabs of rubber for cushioning was over.
That led to a new quest that continues today: How much cushioning can you build into a shoe?
Lighter than foam
Sneaker makers next turned to a gas and a semisolid to help spread the energy of a foot’s impact with the ground.
In 1979, the Nike Air Tailwind began the airbag era, in which pressurized gas is stored in a flexible urethane bag within the sole.
Asics pioneered gel cushioning technology in 1986 with its silicone-based shock absorption. Nike countered in 1987 with the Air Max 1, which had a “window” in the sole designed to show off the air pocket. “At the time that was the cutting edge,” Mr. Smith said.
Though air is lighter than foam, it had to be kept in a rubber vessel, which added weight. So did adding silicone gel packets to the heel and forefoot.
While air bubbles felt more springy, and gel more dampening, they both were able to absorb shocks longer than the standard foam.
An icon of the 1990s tackled a different problem: how laces become loosened during a run. Reebok, building upon its wildly successful Pump basketball sneakers, which could be inflated with the press of a button on the tongue, introduced the Instapump Fury, a colorful, open-paneled, split-soled running sneaker.
“The Instapump used an air bladder that could fit your particular foot, the nuances of your own foot, very, very closely,” Ms. Semmelhack said. “Then you didn’t have to adjust any lacing throughout your run or at any time. So it was very innovative.”
Rise of the super shoes
But as new technologies made foam lighter, shoemakers soon couldn’t get enough of it.
One brand, Hoka, wedged so much cushy foam into its soles, beginning in 2009, that the shoes looked swollen. Runners could hardly “feel the ground anymore,” Smith said. The company’s designs helped push amateur runners to chunkier shoes.
But it was the thick-soled Nike Vaporflys that captured the most attention. They came with a carbon-fiber plate in the midsole that was very light and gave stability to all the squishy foam. The plate stores and releases energy with each stride, and is meant to spring runners forward.
The Vaporflys also use polyether block amide, or PEBA, a bouncier, lighter foam. The twin technologies led to the nickname “super shoes.”
“There was concern that this additional innovation in the running shoe was the equivalent of doping,” Semmelhack said. The shoes cushioned the feet of all three medalists in the men’s marathon at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics. The New York Times found in 2019 that the shoes gave a significant advantage, but they were never banned.
Adidas used its lightest foam in the sole of the Adizero Adios Pro Evo 3, which were worn by Sunday’s record-breaking marathoners. It also said that the shoe has carbon fiber rods to mimic the human foot’s bone structure.
In other words, closer to the bare feet in Pheidippides’s run.
-
World27 seconds agoWhere to Watch Naoya Inoue vs. Junto Nakatani Boxing Live Online
-
News6 minutes agoTrump’s Vision for D.C. ‘Garden of Heroes’ Statues Grows in Size and Cost
-
Politics12 minutes agoSpirit Airlines Shuts Down After Years of Struggle
-
Business18 minutes agoThe Cannabis Industry’s New Best Friend? President Trump
-
Science24 minutes agoShipwreck Reveals Fate of Vanished World War I Coast Guard Cutter
-
Health30 minutes agoShe Lost 104 Lbs. After Finding Her Genetic Weight-Loss Type—Here’s How
-
Lifestyle48 minutes agoHow 7 Looks for ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ Came Together
-
Education54 minutes agoBard College’s President, Leon Botstein, Will Retire After Epstein Revelations