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climate

A satellite image shows a crescent of clouds (an atmospheric river) stretching from Hawaii to the coast of the U.S. Pacific Northwest.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

The Escalating Impact of Global Warming on Atmospheric Rivers

by Saima May Sidik 12 February 202412 February 2024

Climate change is set to intensify atmospheric rivers and exacerbate extreme rainfall worldwide.

Scientists on a boat lowering a seismometer into the water.
Posted inEditors' Vox

The Not-So-Silent Depths

by Gaye Bayrakci and Frauke Klingelhoefer 9 February 202412 February 2024

A new book reveals that ocean depths are far from silent voids, but are actually alive with noise.

Map of the world with the ocean appearing in black and land surfaces appearing in rainbow colors denoting land surface temperatures.
Posted inScience Updates

Trustworthy Satellite Earth Observations for Science and Society

by Fabrizio Niro, Michael Cosh and Jaime Nickeson 8 February 20248 February 2024

Enhancing confidence in satellite observations of terrestrial properties like land surface temperature and soil moisture requires advances in validation and data quality assessment practices.

An aerial photograph of a glacier that terminates at the sea.
Posted inNews

How Did We Miss 20% of Greenland’s Ice Loss?

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 8 February 20242 July 2024

The ice loss was hidden in places existing monitoring methods can’t reach, such as hard-to-map fjords. Machine learning helped scientist revise mass loss estimates and uncover patterns in glacial retreat.

Michael Mann sits on stage holding a microphone.
Posted inNews

Climate Scientist Michael Mann Confronts Defamers in Court After 12-Year Delay and Wins

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 7 February 20248 February 2024

The trial comes as climate impacts and attacks on science and its practitioners are worse than ever.

A small, rectangular piece of paper with the text “climate change” on it sits atop similar bits of paper bearing text such as “global warming” and “air pollution.”
Posted inOpinions

From Newsworthiness to News Usefulness in Climate Change Research

by Marie-Elodie Perga, Laure-Anne Pessina, Stuart Lane and Fabrizio Butera 7 February 20247 February 2024

Current approaches for deciding what science is covered in the media portray only a narrow slice of climate change research and aren’t well suited for stoking climate action.

A pile of logs
Posted inNews

Poorer Countries Face Heavier Consequences of Climate Change

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 6 February 20245 March 2024

As forests shift to higher latitudes, nations to reckon with losses of both market and nonmarket ecosystem benefits.

An orange sponge growing on top of a brown coral.
Posted inNews

Oceans May Have Already Seen 1.7°C of Warming

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 5 February 202412 February 2024

The global warming clock started ticking decades earlier than current estimates assume, according to Caribbean sponges.

A 100× magnified image of stomata on a tulip leaf. The photo looks like a series of stripes interspersed with doughnut shapes. The colors are iridescent purple, orange, and green.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Climate Models Often Miss How Plants Respond to Drought

by Rebecca Owen 5 February 202422 March 2024

New research suggests that Earth system models are underestimating the effect of low moisture levels on plants’ abilities to exchange carbon, water, and energy with the atmosphere.

A satellite photo of a dark ocean with swirls of light blue
Posted inNews

New Satellite Will Help NASA Keep PACE with Earth Systems

by Emily Shepherd 5 February 20245 February 2024

Color and light measurements will help scientists better assess how our oceans and atmosphere interact.

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Coherent, Not Chaotic, Migration in the Brahmaputra-Jamuna River

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The Mid-20th Century Winter Cooling in the Eastern U.S. Explained

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Water Tracks: The Veins of Thawing Landscapes

25 June 202525 June 2025
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