Extensive evidence, including global temperature and sea ice data, shows Earth's climate is changing due to human activity.
Earth passed the 1.5°C warming limit in 2024. The Arctic is warming four times faster than the rest of the world.
The formation, movement and melting of icebergs offer insights into some of the most extreme areas of the cryosphere, like Antarctica and Greenland.
Mariposa California's original daily updated online newspaper is the premier site for news and information on Yosemite, ...
A new study focuses on improving global temperature data sets in light of uneven warming across the globe. To fill gaps in ...
A new study published in Communications Earth & Environment gives possible insight into the underprediction of sea ice ...
New research at NAU looks at faster warming in the Arctic, and highlights concern about risks to the U.S. of a political ...
As recent reports indicate, by 2100, the Arctic will undergo significant changes. If climate warming continues, the region ...
Social media posts sharing a graphic comparing sea ice levels in the Antarctic on the same date 45 years apart misrepresent ...
On Ellesmere Island in the Arctic, on one of the northernmost points of land in the world, sits a small permanent seismic ...
A new paper reveals what lies ahead for the fastest-warming region on Earth. In 2024, the global average air temperature ...
Scientists have issued a dire warning—the Arctic could become ice-free within just three years. This could accelerate rising sea levels, disrupt global weather patterns, and threaten Arctic wildlife.