Scientists Revisit Climate Predictions as Ocean Data Raises New Questions ...
La Niña’s transition to neutral conditions in the eastern Pacific may influence Atlantic hurricane activity and Texas weather ...
The study found that those aerosols could warm parts of the upper atmosphere by about 1.5 degrees Celsius within one or two ...
Frequent deployment of satellites and re-entries by the rockets that deploy them might pose a risk to the Earth's upper ...
Han’s team estimates that the area covered by salty seawater in this Southern Indian Ocean region has shrunk by about 30% over the past 60 years. They describe it as the fastest freshening seen ...
Rainfall is often treated as a gift of geography — a function of latitude, oceans, and atmospheric circulation. A growing ...
A new study published in the Journal of Climate reveals how surface warming in Antarctica, particularly over the Antarctic Peninsula, is significantly altering the stability of the lowest layers of ...
Last September, I traveled to this far north outpost as part of a research team from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
The Pacific Ocean is warming so quickly that scientists had to find a new method for detecting and predicting El Niño and La Niña events.
Researchers at the University of Tokyo used isotope-enabled ensemble modeling and 45 years of data to better trace ...
It’s part of the scenario in “The Day After Tomorrow,” but scientists differ over whether or how fast it may occur. A team ...