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Climate Change

Portions of Europe (foreground) and North Africa are seen in this view from the International Space Station.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

How Much Modification Can Earth’s Water Cycle Handle?

Aaron Sidder, freelance science writer by Aaron Sidder 15 May 202029 September 2021

The planetary boundaries framework defines how much human disturbance various Earth system processes can take, but it may not adequately depict the water cycle or the extent to which we’ve altered it.

Enormous ice chunks about to calve from a glacier in Neko Harbor, Antarctica
Posted inNews

Shrinking Ice Sheets Lifted Global Sea Level 14 Millimeters

Tim Hornyak, Science Writer by Tim Hornyak 15 May 202013 December 2021

Researchers measure both grounded and floating ice sheets using satellite data spanning a 16-year period.

President Donald Trump at mask factory
Posted inNews

No Mask? You May Not Worry About Climate Change, Either

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 14 May 202013 March 2023

People untroubled by climate change are more likely to forgo masks in public.

Smoke from fires along Australia’s eastern coast billows out over the Tasman Sea in November 2019.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

A Revised View of Australia’s Future Climate

by David Shultz 14 May 202010 November 2021

The most recent generation of models of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project better captures rainfall drivers, extreme heat events, and other facets of regional climate.

Tourists stand on a platform to view the rapids at Tiger Leaping Gorge along the Jinsha River in China
Posted inScience Updates

Asia’s Mega Rivers: Common Source, Diverse Fates

by S. A. Kuehl, S. Yang, F. Yu, Y. Copard, J. Liu, C. A. Nittrouer and J. Xu 14 May 20202 November 2021

How do humans affect the ways that Asia’s mega rivers deliver sediment and dissolved matter to farms, river deltas, and, eventually, the sea? A proposed study would construct an integrated picture.

Graphs showing mean static energy in the subcloud layer as a function of latitude and month over land and ocean for convective and non-convective regions
Posted inEditors' Highlights

How Does Convection Work Over the Tropics?

by Suzana Camargo 14 May 202014 February 2023

A new conceptual framework on how convection works in the tropics helps advance understanding of the contrast between land and ocean and how the tropics will respond to climate change.

Large outrigger canoe silhouetted against an orange Hawaiian sky
Posted inNews

Humans Colonized Polynesia Much Earlier Than Previously Thought

Richard Sima, freelance science writer by Richard J. Sima 13 May 20205 June 2023

Evidence from mud, charcoal, and feces suggests humans arrived in East Polynesia during the driest period in 2 millennia.

Skewered meat and vegetables on a barbecue
Posted inENGAGE, News

Pollution Spikes in Chile Tied to Soccer Fans’ Barbecuing

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 11 May 202030 March 2023

In Santiago, mysterious pollution spikes—tenfold above normal levels—occur during televised soccer matches and are caused by tens of thousands of barbecues, new results reveal.

An image of villagers from Huamantanga constructing a shallow stone canal to divert water down a hillside
Posted inNews

El Sistema de Canales Preincaicos Usa Laderas Como Esponjas para Almacenar Agua

Rachel Fritts, Science Writer by Rachel Fritts 7 May 202016 July 2025

Así se preparan para un futuro más seco en la costa occidental de Perú, los investigadores están recurriendo a técnicas del pasado.

Maps showing observed (left) and simulated (right) subsurface ocean heat content changes in the Southern Ocean
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Explaining Cold and Fresh Southern Polar Ocean Surface Waters

by P. Rizzoli 6 May 202017 August 2022

Global climate models do not reproduce observed trends of the Southern polar ocean surface, but an increase in wind-transported sea ice that melts and inhibits mixing may account for the disparity.

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Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

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