Scientists also found that the Earth’s temperature in January was 1.75 degrees Celsius higher than pre-industrial levels.
As global temperatures rise, more regions are experiencing heat levels that exceed the human body's ability to cool itself.
The surprising January heat record coincides with a new study by a climate science heavyweight, former top NASA scientist ...
Earth’s prolonged streak of abnormal heat continued into 2025 despite the arrival of La Niña ocean conditions, which ...
For Americans, news of a record warm January might seem odd given how cold it was. But the U.S. is just a tiny fraction of ...
Climate change is depleting vital ocean nutrients, disrupting marine ecosystems, and threatening food webs, a new study finds ...
A new study conducted by researchers from King’s College London explored the risks we’re likely to face with even the ...
Q&A: Report urges global leaders to address interconnected environmental, social and economic crises
Pamela McElwee, a professor in the Department of Human Ecology at the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences ...
Near-Earth asteroid Bennu has a slim chance of colliding with Earth in 2182. If it does, the impact could trigger a global ...
Rising global temperatures may render extensive regions of the planet too hot for human survival over the coming decades.
“ Tropical regions are home to rich biodiversity and diverse ecosystems, including vital natural land types such as forests. There is a more consistent consensus that temperature increases in tropical ...
The North Pole was above freezing on Sunday after an extreme winter warming event caused temperatures to climb more than 36 F (20 C) in the high Arctic.
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