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climate

Graph from the article.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Climate Variations in Tropical Oceans Drive Primarily Extreme Events

by Tissa Illangasekare 1 December 20251 December 2025

Severe droughts and floods are primarily driven by climate variations in tropical oceans, with interannual and decadal patterns playing key roles.

A green tractor towing a no-till planter drives through a field of bright yellow wild mustard plants.
Posted inOpinions

How Can We Tell If Climate-Smart Agriculture Stores Carbon?

by Savannah Gupton, Mark Bradford, Alex Polussa, Sara E. Kuebbing and Emily E. Oldfield 1 December 20252 February 2026

Quantitative data at real-world scales are needed to assess the effects of cover cropping and other practices on soil carbon storage. Large-scale medical studies provide a proven methodology.

A large, anvil-shaped cloud
Posted inNews

Some Summer Storms Spit Sooty Particles into the Stratosphere

by Grace van Deelen 26 November 202526 November 2025

Earth’s typically pristine stratosphere is filling with particles from wildfires and additional moisture due to strong convective storms.

Aerial view of a wide blue ice area in the Transantarctic Mountains, where ancient Antarctic ice cores or fragments can be found for climate research
Posted inNews

New Lessons from Old Ice: How We Understand Past (and Future) Heating

by Mariana Mastache-Maldonado 24 November 202524 November 2025

Fragments of blue ice up to 6 million years old—the oldest ever found—offer key insights into Earth’s warming cycles. Researchers are using these ancient data to refine models of our future climate.

A photo on the left shows a salt marsh with high grasses beneath gray clouds. On the right is an area with dry grass and clusters of trees, with mountains and puffy white clouds in the distance.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Understanding Flux, from the Wettest Ecosystems to the Driest

by Nathaniel Scharping 24 November 202524 November 2025

Pulses of activity, from tides to precipitation swings, play a crucial, changing role in ecosystems worldwide.

A red horse stands in a marsh, up to its knees, and looks back at the camera.
Posted inNews

What Salty Water Means for Wild Horses

by Rebecca Owen 21 November 20252 March 2026

New research monitors how saltwater intrusion is affecting the behaviors of Shackleford Banks’s wild horses.

Cool winds flow over Tsanteleina Glacier in Italy.
Posted inNews

Glaciers Are Warming More Slowly Than Expected, but Not for Long

by Kaja Šeruga 20 November 202521 January 2026

An unprecedented dataset offers insight into the counterintuitive cooling effect of glaciers on a global scale.

A map of Los Angeles with hotter zip codes shaded red. Blue triangles appear across the map.
Posted inNews

New Tool Maps the Overlap of Heat and Health in California

by J. Besl 19 November 202526 November 2025

CalHeatScore creates heat wave warnings for every zip code in California, using temperature data, socioeconomic indicators, and the history of emergency room visits, to predict heat-related health risk.

A man sits on the balcony of a flooded building along the banks of an overflowing river.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

A New Way for Coastal Planners to Explore the Costs of Rising Seas

by Saima May Sidik 18 November 202518 November 2025

A framework featuring a range of plausible future sea level rise scenarios could help coastal planners prepare critical infrastructure for the worst-case scenario.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

全球气候模型需要全面纳入氮循环

by Nathaniel Scharping 18 November 202518 November 2025

氮在气候变化、人类健康和农业等领域发挥着重要作用。一位研究人员认为,气候模型若能更全面地纳入氮的影响,将会受益匪浅。

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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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As Wildfires Increase in the West, So Does Suppression Spending

10 June 202610 June 2026
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Multi-Scale Fault Roughness Encapsulated in a Friction Law

11 June 202611 June 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
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