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Updated: 1 day 9 hours ago

Climate models reveal how human activity may be locking the Southwest into permanent drought

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 18:30
A new wave of climate research is sounding a stark warning: Human activity may be driving drought more intensely—and more directly—than previously understood.

Rapidly changing river patterns found in High Mountain Asia pose challenge for region's energy future

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 16:40
An international team of researchers led by the University of Massachusetts Amherst has tracked changes in more than 114,000 rivers in High Mountain Asia over a 15-year period. The paper, published in AGU Advances, reported that nearly 10% of these rivers saw an increase in flow, with an increasing proportion of that water coming from glacial ice melt compared to precipitation.

High-resolution models predict tropical cyclone rainfall will rise sharply under global warming

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 16:00
Extreme rainfall in New Zealand from future cyclones could rise by up to 35%. New high-resolution modeling predicts that rainfall from tropical cyclones will significantly increase under global warming.

Air quality data derived from megacities can lead to significant inaccuracies when applied to US urban centers

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 15:56
Researchers at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) have published a paper in Communications Earth & Environment that demonstrates for the first time that using data gathered on atmospheric particles from Chinese megacities to characterize air quality for U.S. urban centers leads to significant inaccuracies.

Tiny creatures, big insights: Copepods uncover sea's microbial signature

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 15:01
An international study led by Prof. Tamar Guy-Haim and Dr. Ximena Velasquez from the Israel Oceanographic and Limnological Research (IOLR) has revealed that tiny planktonic crustaceans carry a unique microbial signature that better reflects ocean currents and environmental gradients than microbes found freely in seawater.

Seafloor fiber sensing reveals how falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 15:00
As glaciers melt, huge chunks of ice break free and splash into the sea, generating tsunami-sized waves and leaving behind a powerful wake as they drift away. This process, called calving, is important for researchers to understand. But the front of a glacier is a dangerous place for data collection.

Sediment surge: Years after an earthquake, rivers still carry the mountains downstream

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 15:00
On May 12, 2008, the magnitude 7.9 Wenchuan earthquake shook central China, its destructive tremors spreading from the flank of the Longmen Shan, or Dragon's Gate Mountains, along the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau.

Overhaul global food systems to avert worsening land crisis, scientists urge

Wed, 08/13/2025 - 15:00
In the journal Nature, 21 leading scientists prescribe ways to use food systems to halt and reverse land degradation, underlining that doing so must become a top global priority to mitigate climate change and stop biodiversity loss.

Rivers under pressure: Satellite data filtering techniques may underestimate Europe's water storage changes

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 20:09
Research in the International Journal of Hydrology Science and Technology has shown that conventional approaches to measuring water storage across Europe's complex river systems may significantly underrepresent the scale and severity of changes linked to climate change.

Mediterranean climate's future: Study suggests swing between droughts and downpours

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 19:26
From its olive groves to its coastal cities, the Mediterranean depends on a delicate balance of rain and sun, but climate change is tipping the scales.

Rapa Nui's iconic moai statues threatened by sea level rise

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 18:48
By 2080, rising sea levels could cause seasonal waves to reach Ahu Tongariki, the iconic ceremonial platform that is part of the Rapa Nui National Park, a UNESCO world heritage site, according to a study published in the Journal of Cultural Heritage by a team of researchers from the UH at Mānoa. This coastal flooding also threatens 51 cultural assets in the area, including Rapa Nui's world-renowned moai statues.

Scientists explore real-time tsunami warning system on world's fastest supercomputer

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 17:28
Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) have helped develop an advanced, real-time tsunami forecasting system—powered by El Capitan, the world's fastest supercomputer—that could dramatically improve early warning capabilities for coastal communities near earthquake zones.

Rare deep-sea hydrothermal system discovered in western Pacific produces massive hydrogen emissions

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 15:21
Hydrogen-producing hydrothermal systems in the deep ocean are rare but critical to understanding Earth's internal processes and the conditions that may have fostered life's origins. Now scientists from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS) have discovered a massive hydrogen-rich hydrothermal system beneath the western Pacific seafloor, offering a new glimpse into deep-sea serpentinization—a process in which iron- and magnesium-rich rocks chemically react with water to form serpentine minerals and release hydrogen.

The next 'Big One' on the San Andreas fault might not be the earthquake we expect, researchers say

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 13:40
What could the next mega-earthquake on California's notorious San Andreas fault look like?

Coral skeletons show sea-level rise began accelerating earlier than previously thought

Tue, 08/12/2025 - 12:41
An international study by marine scientists based in Singapore has revealed that sea-level rise in the Indian Ocean began accelerating far earlier than previously thought, with corals providing an unbroken natural record of ocean change stretching back to the early 20th century.

As the world churns: How bioturbation has shaped ocean floors over 540 million years

Mon, 08/11/2025 - 20:06
The murky world at the bottom of the oceans is now a little clearer, thanks to a new study that tracks the evolution of marine sediment layers across hundreds of millions of years.

What really fueled the Manitoba Wildfires in 2025? New study breaks it down

Mon, 08/11/2025 - 18:13
A recent study is shedding light on the factors that contributed to the significant wildfires in Manitoba in May 2025. The research explores how unusual weather patterns and stressed vegetation combined to create an ideal environment for disaster.

How organic matter traps water in soil—even in the driest conditions

Mon, 08/11/2025 - 16:35
From lifelong farmers to backyard gardeners, most plant-lovers know that adding organic matter to a field, vegetable plot or flowerpot increases the soil's moisture. Now, for the first time, Northwestern University scientists have uncovered the molecular mechanisms that enable organic matter to boost soil's ability to retain water—even in desert-like conditions. The study is published in the journal PNAS Nexus.

Ocean anomalies traveling north crucial for the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation

Mon, 08/11/2025 - 15:39
Anomalies in temperature and salinity that originate in the midlatitude North Atlantic can affect the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in the Nordic Seas up to a decade later. A new study published in Communications Earth & Environment shows that the anomalies that travel northward with the Atlantic Water are an important part of the system, and actively modulate both the inflow of warm water into the Nordic Seas and the overflow of dense water back into the deep Atlantic.

Lakes may be carbon sinks, not sources, thanks to overlooked shorelines

Mon, 08/11/2025 - 15:29
Lakes have long been viewed as sources of carbon dioxide emissions, but new research suggests they may actually act as carbon sinks. A study led by Uppsala University reveals that lake shorelines store more carbon than previously believed, highlighting the need to include these littoral zones in calculations of the continental carbon balance.

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