News

The planet’s rotation fluctuates as it travels around the sun, and measurements suggest we’re losing more than a millisecond ...
A groundbreaking study in the journal Science, has unveiled how deep ocean currents—known as global overturning ...
South Carolina's coast is home to islands big and small, formed by the natural movement of sand. But rising tides could ...
Colossal volcanic eruptions like the kind that may have obliterated the dinosaurs more than 65 million years ago are caused ...
Putting aerosols in the stratosphere to reflect sunlight could prevent the shutdown of key ocean currents, but only if it is ...
Normally, younger rocks are deposited above older ones, forming predictable geologic layers. In the North Sea, this process ...
The Gordon’s Pond Trail connects Cape Henlopen to Rehoboth Beach, offering a scenic route between Delaware’s natural gem and its more developed neighbor. It’s like having a secret passage between two ...
Almost 20 years since a Filipino last stood on top of the world, 30-year-old Jeno Panganiban has made history, becoming the youngest Filipino male and the 11th Filipino to summit Mount Everest.
Earth’s soil is drying up. It could be irreversible. The losses in soil moisture already pose issues for farming, irrigation systems and critical water resources for humans.
An analysis of peat from ancient wetlands provides a reconstruction of how sea level increased millennia ago — and how it might rise again with global warming.
An analysis of peat layers at the bottom of the North Sea shows how fast sea level rose during the end of the last ice age, when Earth was warming at a similar rate as today.
Global sea level rose faster than expected in 2024, according to NASA analysis Ocean water expands as it warms, researchers said.