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Climate Change

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.

A hilly landscape in the Reynolds Creek Critical Zone Observatory, with charred soil in the foreground.
Posted inScience Updates

Soil Signals Tell of Landscape Disturbances

by K. A. Lohse, Sharon Billings, R. A. DiBiase, P. Kumar, A. A. Berhe and J. Kaye 24 September 202022 November 2021

The lasting influence humans have on Earth’s critical zone—and how geologic forces have mediated those influences—is revealed in studies of soil and carbon migration.

Closeup of a bank, showing layers of vegetation, plant roots, and soil
Posted inScience Updates

Life Teems Below the Surface

by J. Chorover, E. Aronson, J. McIntosh and E. Roden 24 September 202022 November 2021

Scientists are resolving how plants, microbes, and lithology sculpt the structure of the critical zone.

An image of many trees planted along a cliff.
Posted inAGU News

Next Steps for the Critical Zone

Heather Goss, AGU Publisher by Heather Goss 24 September 202022 March 2022

In October, Eos examines a pivotal point for a field of science that’s starting to make a name for itself.

Perspective looking upward from the base of a large tree
Posted inFeatures

Critical Zone Science Comes of Age

by P. Waldron 24 September 202022 March 2022

The developing field, which unites Earth scientists to examine the planet’s surface as a single, unified entity, is unraveling the complex, interconnected processes that support life on Earth.

A cloudy mountain scene in southern France
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Regional Sensitivities Strongly Affect Modeled Climate Extremes

by David Shultz 22 September 202022 February 2023

Analysis of temperature and precipitation extremes in two generations of CMIP climate models revealed similarities in regional climate sensitivities, contrasting with divergent global sensitivities.

Hurricane Douglas churns westward toward Hawaii
Posted inNews

Tropical Cyclones Suppress Rainfall in Their Wakes

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 22 September 202016 December 2021

Passing storms dredge up colder ocean water, curbing evaporation and decreasing cloud coverage and rainfall for weeks, satellite data reveal.

Prototype structure made from the soil-based concrete replacement
Posted inNews

Using Dirt to Clean Up Construction

by Jackie Rocheleau 22 September 202011 January 2022

The construction industry is one of the world’s largest emitters of carbon dioxide. Whether it can reduce those emissions depends on replacing its most common building material.

Satellite image of a phytoplankton bloom in the Barents Sea
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Most of the Arctic’s Microscopic Algae Are Chilling Under Ice

Rachel Fritts, Science Writer by Rachel Fritts 21 September 20208 February 2023

New research reveals that tiny single-celled organisms in the Arctic Ocean are growing more numerous as climate change thins the ice.

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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

An Ancient Landscape Beneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet

8 April 20266 April 2026
Editors' Vox

The Future of Earth’s Future

24 March 202624 March 2026
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