The surprising January heat record coincides with a new study by a climate science heavyweight, former top NASA scientist ...
Scientists link global warming to lower sulfur pollution from ships. Fewer ship aerosols mean less sunlight reflection, allowing heat to stay.
El Niño's cooler flip side, a La Niña, tends to dampen the effects of global warming, making record temperatures far less ...
Earth’s prolonged streak of abnormal heat continued into 2025 despite the arrival of La Niña ocean conditions, which ...
A new review paper, led by NSIDC senior research scientist Julienne Stroeve and published in Science on February 6, 2025, ...
It is widely accepted that human activities are the primary drivers of global warming and environmental crises, including the ...
A new study conducted by researchers from King’s College London explored the risks we’re likely to face with even the ...
During summers in college, I worked as an orderly in psychiatric hospitals.  One day, a group of teenage patients wanted to ...
Rising global temperatures may render extensive regions of the planet too hot for human survival over the coming decades.
As global temperatures rise, more regions are experiencing heat levels that exceed the human body's ability to cool itself.