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The latest news on earth sciences and the environment
Updated: 1 hour 47 min ago

Monitoring hidden processes beneath Kīlauea could aid eruption forecast

6 hours 47 min ago
The massive 2018 eruption of Kīlauea Volcano on Hawai'i Island lasted for months, destroyed neighborhoods, and was associated with 60,000 earthquakes.

Andes glaciers will fail to buffer megadroughts by century's end, study suggests

10 hours 58 min ago
In light of the ongoing fifteen-year megadrought in Chile, an international team of researchers, including Francesca Pellicciotti from the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), addressed a bold future scenario. Their findings: by the end of the century, the considerably worn-out glaciers will not be able to buffer a similar megadrought. They call for coordinated global climate policies to develop effective water management strategies. The results are published in Communications Earth & Environment.

Antarctic ice loss linked to 'storms' at ocean's subsurface

10 hours 58 min ago
Researchers at the University of California, Irvine and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have identified stormlike circulation patterns beneath the Antarctic ice shelves that are causing aggressive melting, with major implications for global sea level rise projections.

Weather behind past heat waves could return far deadlier

10 hours 58 min ago
The weather patterns that produced some of Europe's most extreme heat waves over the past three decades could prove far more lethal if they strike in today's hotter climate, pushing weekly deaths toward levels seen during the COVID pandemic, according to a study in Nature Climate Change.

Early Triassic sediments reveal Earth's hidden wildfire past

20 hours 58 min ago
An international team of scientists, including a senior researcher at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, has uncovered new evidence of ancient wildfires that reshapes our understanding of Earth's turbulent Early Triassic epoch, about 250 million years ago.

First complete record of global underground CO₂ storage released

Mon, 11/17/2025 - 21:26
The first-ever audited account of the actual amounts of CO2 stored underground by CCS projects globally has been released. It was created by a new international consortium of scientists and industrial partners, including NTNU.

California beaches are holding steady or gaining width, showing more resilience than expected

Mon, 11/17/2025 - 18:08
Two new studies from researchers at UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography provide encouraging news about California's beaches at both local and statewide scales.

Sea ice melting intensifies warming and humidification of high Arctic land, study finds

Mon, 11/17/2025 - 15:42
A research team has found that summer rainfall in the Arctic would increase by about 17% under 2°C global warming, approximately 16% of which is attributed to sea ice retreat. Their findings were published in Geophysical Research Letters.

Lab setup mimics Arctic erosion to find out why shorelines are crumbling

Mon, 11/17/2025 - 15:18
Arctic coastlines are falling into the sea. Wave action, rising sea levels, and thawing permafrost are all contributing to the massive erosion that has forced whole towns to move farther from the water's edge.

Can we tap the ocean's power to capture carbon?

Mon, 11/17/2025 - 13:50
The oceans have to play a role in helping humanity remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to curb dangerous climate warming. But are we ready to scale up the technologies that will do the job?

Satellites play critical role in tracking climate adaptation, researchers say

Fri, 11/14/2025 - 18:29
Satellite-based Earth observation provides a unique and powerful tool in tracking climate adaptation, an international study involving University of Galway researchers has shown.

Offsetting blue carbon benefits: Mangrove tree stems identified as previously underestimated methane source

Fri, 11/14/2025 - 16:16
Mangrove ecosystems rank among the most efficient "blue carbon" systems on Earth, capable of absorbing and storing vast quantities of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). However, mangroves also release methane (CH4), a potent greenhouse gas, potentially offsetting a portion of their climate mitigation benefits.

Axial Seamount experiment to test real-time eruption forecasts

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 19:59
Currently, scientists struggle to forecast volcano eruption events, as no universally reliable, real-time eruption forecasting framework is available. Instead, researchers often rely on retrospective analysis to evaluate eruptions. And although much has been learned from doing this, it can sometimes introduce biases, such as data snooping, hindsight reinterpretation, and post-eruption model adjustment.

Invisible groundwater threatens aging urban infrastructure, researchers warn

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 18:49
Groundwater rise as a result of climate change poses a significant threat to coastal cities, says University of Rhode Island assistant professor of geosciences Christopher Russoniello. Russoniello and colleagues recently published a commentary piece highlighting hazards that are often overlooked in urban infrastructure.

Tracing mountain water to its hidden sources

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 15:34
In mountain regions like the Rockies, headwater streams make up more than 70% of the river network and support the downstream waterways and communities. These headwaters are also home to many forms of aquatic life. While these sources are crucial, very few are monitored, and aspects of their hydrology are not well understood.

Microbial network restructuring mitigates long-term soil carbon emissions from warming, decade-long study finds

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 13:58
Soils release approximately 40–60 petagrams (Pg) of carbon annually into the atmosphere through microbial metabolism. Climate warming is projected to further enhance soil microbial respiration, intensifying positive carbon–climate feedback loops. However, it remains unclear whether this feedback might weaken over several years.

Enhanced climate models reveal how our cities are driving and feeling the effects of climate change

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:43
Scientists have developed a new way to represent the world's cities in global climate and Earth system models (GCM & ESMs), offering a more accurate picture of how urban areas are being affected by—and contributing to—climate change.

Study provides new forecasts of remote islands' vulnerability to sea level rise

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:12
In the summer of 2022, 20 islands in the Maldives were flooded when a distant swell event in the Indian Ocean coincided with an extremely high tide level.

Paperwork won't prepare us for climate change: Planning might

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:57
As global climate talks at COP30 shift from setting lofty targets to transforming the systems that will get us there, Australia has been quietly strengthening its climate resilience rulebook.

The 1.5°C target—an obituary?

Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:52
"The truth is that we have failed to avoid an overshooting above 1.5°C in the next few years," UN Secretary-General António Guterres recently admitted ahead of the COP30 UN Climate Change Conference.

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