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Climate Change

Small red jelly hovers above the deep seafloor
Posted inNews

Earthquakes Reveal How Quickly the Ocean Is Warming

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 2 October 202016 March 2022

By timing sound waves set in motion by earthquakes, scientists have estimated that the Indian Ocean is warming by roughly 0.044 K per decade.

Close-up of a beautiful soft coral sea fan
Posted inNews

Climate Change May Shift Coral Population Dynamics

by S. Norris 30 September 20208 September 2022

New paleoceanographic research indicates that warming waters may contribute to fewer coral reefs but to a flourishing presence of soft-bodied corals.

Sea ice covers Canada's Hudson Bay. Artificial sea ice restoration could alter a complex web of interactions.
Posted inOpinions

Implications of Sea Ice Management for Arctic Biogeochemistry

by L. Miller, F. Fripiat, S. Moreau, D. Nomura, J. Stefels, N. Steiner, L. Tedesco and M. Vancoppenolle 30 September 202027 September 2022

Geoengineering strategies to slow sea ice melting would affect not only Earth’s climate but also the biology and chemistry of the oceans, atmosphere, and ice.

Aerial view of patchwork agricultural fields in Illinois
Posted inScience Updates

Critical Agents of Change at Earth’s Surface

by P. Kumar, E. Herndon and D. D. Richter 29 September 202025 March 2022

By way of agriculture and industry, humans have major influences on the critical zone. Our past and present effects on the landscape, soil, and water will echo for a long time to come.

Irrigation machinery sprays water on the green vegetation of a mango farm in South Africa.
Posted inNews

Minireservorios Podrían Salvar a Agricultores con Suelos Arenosos

Kate Wheeling, freelance science writer by Kate Wheeling 28 September 202031 October 2022

Una tecnología de retención de agua subterránea recientemente reactivada podría conservar el agua y aumentar drásticamente el rendimiento de los cultivos en paisajes áridos con suelos arenosos como el África Subsahariana.

Presidential debate stage preparations in 2016
Posted inNews

Five Science Questions That Ought to Be Asked at the Debates

by G. Yohe, H. Jacoby, B. Santer and R. Richels 25 September 202015 September 2025

Journalists, moderators, and the public have an important opportunity to question the presidential and vice presidential candidates in the upcoming TV debates.

A white, rounded hut that serves as a direct Sun polarimeter
Posted inNews

Have We Got Dust All Wrong?

by S. Dimitropoulos 25 September 202026 October 2021

Scientists are challenging conventional notions of how dust particles are aligned; “everything we’ve so far hypothesized about the impact of dust on the atmosphere might be misplaced.”

Aerial photo of brown seaweed lining an entire stretch of a beach in Barbados
Posted inNews

Saint Lucia Works to Release Itself from Sargassum’s Stranglehold

by Sarah Peter 25 September 20204 January 2024

Nearly 10 years ago, Caribbean beaches experienced a sudden onslaught of Sargassum. Today residents continue to explore ways to mitigate the seaweed’s damage to local health and livelihoods.

A natural gas well in the Bakken Formation of North Dakota flares at night
Posted inNews

The G20 Is Investing in Fossil Fuels

Rishika Pardikar, Science Writer by Rishika Pardikar 24 September 20206 May 2022

Among the G20, the United States and United Kingdom have invested the most in fossil fuels since the beginning of 2020.

Image of American Expeditionary Force victims of the Spanish flu at a U.S. Army Camp Hospital in Aix-les-Bains, France, in 1918
Posted inNews

Podcast: The Unusual Relationship Between Climate and Pandemics

by Lauren Lipuma 24 September 20205 March 2026

Two recent studies show how climate affects human pandemics and how pandemics, in turn, alter the environment.

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 116 117 118 119 120 … 257 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

How Internal Waves Transport Energy Thousands of Miles Across the Ocean

26 March 202626 March 2026
Editors' Highlights

Using Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) to Improve Lunar Seismic Monitoring

6 April 20261 April 2026
Editors' Vox

The Future of Earth’s Future

24 March 202624 March 2026
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