The Last Spot on Earth Just Passed a Historic Climate Milestone
On 23rd May, for the first time in 4 million years, carbon dioxide concentrations cleared 400 parts per million (ppm) at the South Pole.
On 23rd May, for the first time in 4 million years, carbon dioxide concentrations cleared 400 parts per million (ppm) at the South Pole.
Say goodbye to the Bramble Cay melomys, a small rat-like creature that lived on a tiny island near the north coast of Australia.
Guardian investigation outs Peabody for bankrolling think tanks, corporate lobbyists, trade associations, and individual scientists.
a group of researchers have scientific evidence to back up French President Francois Hollande's plea that the flood show the French should rally against climate change.
The closer you look at Musk's words and actions, the more you’ll start to see: he’s an alien who came from another galaxy to help save the human race.
Antarctica is staying cool while the Arctic melts away, but there's no conspiracy here. According to a new paper global ocean currents mean Antarctica will be the last place to suffer at the hands of global warming.
Warmer waters are causing swathes of Australia's iconic coral to turn a ghostly white, in turn losing its precious defences.
The longstanding joke about fusion—that it’s the energy source of the future, and always will be—may be the field’s biggest problem.
If the only reason you’re worried about global warming is that it will mean a shorter ski season, you can go ahead and buy that petrol-guzzling would-be tank you’ve been eyeing.
Antibiotics could be making cows gassier and boosting their contribution to global warming.
If you try to imagine the most pathetic gathering of humans ever, it would probably look a lot like this group desperately trying to squeeze the last gasp of relevance out of a backwards-thinking, planet-strangling industry.
Al Gore's 2006 climate change film is ten years old and more relevant than ever.
Something strange is happening to the oceans. As coral reefs wither and fisheries collapse, octopuses are multiplying like mad.
Four billion years ago, extreme space weather was probably the norm. And rather than bringing the apocalypse, it might have kickstarted life.
As an out-of-control blaze continues to swell in size in Canda, a bigger picture is starting to emerge: major fires like this are the future, and we’d better get used to it.
They sound just like monsters from science fiction