Nature for nerds
Read next
A meteorologist explains why dozens of twisters touched down across the Florida peninsula before the storm's landfall.
Six unusual earthquakes shook Mount Adams in September, but it's too soon to speculate about a potential eruption
If warmer ocean temperatures persist, we could be looking at more active hurricane seasons—and more disasters—in the years ahead.
Use promo code MILTONRELIEF for rides to and from designated shelters.
The monster storm will have winds reaching 150 miles (241 kilometers) per hour, and will dump an enormous amount of rain on coastal Florida.
Hurricane Helene's closure of two essential quartz mines in North Carolina reveals the precarity of the solar energy product pipeline.
Significant river flooding, storm surge, and rainfall are expected in the Sunshine State as a Category 5 hurricane barrels towards its western coast.
Vegetation has grown more than tenfold over the past four decades, a new study finds.
Images from space show vast swaths of the American southeast without power days after the storm.
New research shows that the patterns of Earth’s high winds have led to serious problems on the ground.
The 5.3-mile-wide crater is now confirmed to be 66 million years old, suggesting that the impact of at least two giant space rocks preceded the mass extinction of dinosaurs.
The world's tallest peak has inched above its peers, and now researchers think they have an explanation.
Underground methane blasts are behind Siberia’s puzzling exploding craters, according to new research.
The Category 5 event dropped significant amounts of rain across the Gulf of Alaska.
Helene will make landfall Thursday evening, bringing about life-threatening conditions across the northwest coast.
Back in 2022, 63% of Americans believed EVs were greener. Now it's 58%.
Only about 5% of plastic in the U.S. actually gets recycled.
After years of research, scientists studying the massive Thwaites Glacier have found little reason for optimism.
Using a unique, circular wave pool, engineers learned that waves can be four time steeper than previously calculated.
A weird number of craters are located close to the equator, and the odds that this is random are incredibly low, researchers say.
Mode
Follow us