Five Frightening Observations From the Latest International Climate Change Report
Adaptation cannot save us from all the negative impacts of pumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere
How Paintings of Sunsets Immortalize Past Volcanic Eruptions
The balance of reds and greens reflects the amount of tiny particles in the atmosphere, scientists say
A World of Water Woes
From the Middle East to the Caribbean to Australia, people around the world are dealing with water scarcity
Warm, Wet Times Spurred Medieval Mongol Rise
Genghis Khan—and his army of men on horseback—benefitted from boom in grasslands
Climate Change Felt in Deep Waters of Antarctica
A surge in freshwater at the surface may have shut down mixing of water layers in the Weddell Sea
Congo’s Civil Wars Took A Toll On Its Forests
Conflicts drove the human population deep into protected areas, satellite maps reveal
Why We Can Blame A Warm Arctic For This Winter’s Icy Chill
Arctic amplification is affecting the jet stream and letting weather systems persist longer, atmospheric scientist says
Yellowstone Belches Ancient Helium
Gas stored in the Earth’s crust for hundreds of millions of years is released by volcanic hotspot
Natural Gas Really Is Better Than Coal
If too much methane leaks during production, though, the benefits will be lost
A World of Vanishing Lakes
From the Dead Sea to a Louisiana lake that was sucked into the Earth, the stories behind the disappearances are varied
The Secrets of Sherlock’s Mind Palace
The BBC/Masterpiece sleuth employs a memory technique invented by the ancient Greeks
Australian Cyclone Activity Hits Record Low Levels
Climate change may explain the recent drop, scientists say
Large Earthquakes Still Possible in the Central United States
The region shook in 1811 and 1812, and scientists say it could happen again
Save the Big Trees!
A large tree grows more quickly and sucks up a lot more carbon than a smaller one, scientists find
Plutonium From Nuclear Tests Lingers in the Atmosphere
Don’t worry, scientists say that it’s not a threat to human health but instead could be a marker of how air circulates
Fewer Freezes Let Florida’s Mangroves Move North
Climate change has extended the range in which mangroves can survive the winter, letting them take root farther north and invade salt marshes
Scientists Successfully Forecasted the Size and Location of an Earthquake
Well before Costa Rica shook in a magnitude 7.6 quake in September 2012, geoscientists forecasted that the region was due for a magnitude 7.7 to 7.8 quake
Six Ways Climate Change Is Waging War on Christmas
If Santa really lived at the North Pole, he would have drowned long ago--his icy abode is slowly melting
Summer Heat Waves May Be Linked To Sea Ice Loss
As ice melts, the jet stream gets stuck in the north, causing warm weather to linger in the south--but the reason why this occurs remains unknown
Fault That Caused Japan's 2011 Earthquake Is Thin and Slippery
A group of scientists drilled miles beneath the Pacific Ocean, uncovering conditions that made the Tohoku-Oki earthquake and tsunami so devastating
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