Researchers in the United States, Europe, and Argentina have discovered that some trees stop growing in the heat of summer—a find that could upend current climate models.
This preliminary estimate underscores the growing threat of deadly extreme heat events despite efforts to adapt to a warming world.
Warmer waters could boost global temperatures, exacerbate sea level rise, and fuel extreme storms.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s public-facing hub for climate science, climate.gov, has been reborn as climate.us.
A new study suggests that once the global warming exceeds a certain threshold, weather impacts of super El Niños could become less severe.
In a recent survey, two-thirds of respondents said global warming is impacting their cost of living.
Climate scientists are sounding the alarm after a stubborn Antarctic heat wave shattered the region's winter heat record.
Scientists are still untangling the complex relationship between El Niño and human-driven warming, but their confluence has major implications for extreme weather and global temperatures.
Researchers are pushing for more aggressive emissions reductions to minimize the threat of concurrent extreme weather events.
A volcanic eruption in the South Pacific cleaned up its own methane pollution, offering a potential mechanism for removing this potent greenhouse gas from the atmosphere.