Nature for nerds
Read next
Weather balloon operations will stop or be reduced at 11 locations across the country due to staffing shortages caused by recent NOAA layoffs.
Hurricane Helene, which slammed into Florida's Big Bend in late September, caused the deaths of nearly 250 people—a number only dwarfed by the infamous 2005 storm.
After a string of discouraging rulings for other cities, a court upheld NYC's efforts to decarbonize its buildings.
Ancient sponges and corals were found on the exposed seafloor, in an area previously inaccessible to humans.
After mass layoffs at NOAA, meteorologist Andrew Hazelton finds himself in a bureaucratic no man’s land—fired, then reinstated, but still unable to work.
NASA's Landsats captured views of a Swiss glacier 40 years apart, showing how a warming world has reduced its footprint.
The Trump White House is ready to divvy up public lands for private profits.
Teslas were once a green status symbol. Donald Trump's second term is changing that.
A new study reveals that Earth's biomes changed dramatically in the wake of mass volcanic eruptions 252 million years ago.
Looks like banking on billionaires to solve climate change isn't gonna do the trick.
Climate change and bird flu are already driving up food prices. Trump's tariffs are about to make it even worse.
Volcanologists at the Alaska Volcano Observatory have been monitoring volcanic unrest since April of last year.
Brazil ruins the environment to make it easier to host a conference about solving climate change.
The hurricane jumped three Safford-Simpson hurricane categories in less than a day, and scientists now propose a new factor that contributed to the storm's evolution.
Climate scientists thought stronger atmospheric rivers would accelerate Greenland's ice loss—but it might actually be slowing it down.
A rocky stretch in Western Australia's Pilbara, near Earth's earliest-confirmed lifeforms, was hit by a meteorite about 3.5 billion years ago.
Researchers reconstructed the history of an unusual 30-year-old bird nest based on the expiration dates printed on plastic waste in the structure.
Computer models that factor in the Sun's impact on Earth's surface temperatures are providing more accurate simulations of past earthquakes.
The behemoth A23a calved in 1986 and has been drifting across the Southern Ocean for the last five years.
An ultra-powerful eruption 79,500 years ago may not have disrupted the climate as badly as feared, according to Earth scientists.
Mode
Follow us