Sea levels rose and fell many times during the ice age, showing ice sheets were larger and more active much earlier than once believed.
Rising seas are irreversible on human timescales and among the most severe consequences of climate change. Emissions released ...
Khun Samut Chin lies at the forefront of climate change. An estimated 410 million people, 59% in tropical Asia, could face ...
Global scientists warn that humanity is on the verge of crossing irreversible climate thresholds, with coral reefs already at their tipping point and polar ice sheets possibly beyond recovery. The ...
Over 50 years later, they recreated it Couple renovating home told by architect a "hidden room" has been found What researchers found leaking out of cracks in the Antarctic seabed A long-lost ancient ...
Continental shelf seas—the shallow waters surrounding our coasts that provide most of the world's seafood—are absorbing more ...
New research unexpectedly identified the North American ice sheets, not the Antarctic ones, as the main cause of a prehistoric event of sea-level surge.