noise pollution
The frustrating wait for quiet in Chennai
Deepavali is less than a month away — then again it will only be a storm amid a steady drizzle of noises
noise pollution
Deepavali is less than a month away — then again it will only be a storm amid a steady drizzle of noises
Deepavali
Excerpt from ‘More light, less sound: On firecrackers and a festival of light’, an editorial in The Hindu on November 7, 2023: The Noise Pollution (Regulation and Control) Rules 2000 stipulate that firecrackers cannot be burst in ‘silence zones’, designated by State governments, and anywhere after 10 p.m. From
astro-tourism
This is welcome news: The cluster of six hamlets of #Hanle – Bhok, Shado, Punguk, Khuldo, Naga & Tibetan Refugee habitations within the #Changthang Wildlife Sanctuary situated around the Indian Astronomical Observatory of the @IIABengaluru have been NOTIFIED as "Hanle Dark Sky Reserve"@lg_ladakh pic.twitter.com/SIsQ5Z0oEd
I woke up this morning to a PTI report telling me Delhi’s air quality had fallen to ‘very poor’ on Deepavali, the Hindu ostensible festival of lights, with many people defying the Supreme Court’s direction to burst firecrackers only between 8 pm and 10 pm. This defiance is
Central Pollution Control Board
The Indian festival of Deepavali gets its name from the Sanksrit for “display of lights”, “Deepaanaam aavali“. These days, the festival is anything but about lights, especially in urban centers where the bursting of loud firecrackers has replaced the gentler display of lamps. Sometimes, Bangalore – where I live – sounds like