The Colorado River Basin, like much of the southwestern U.S., is experiencing a drought so historic—it began in 1999—that ...
Work by research firm Metr suggests AI is doubling capacity every seven months and that it's likely "there's at least another ...
Delia Stevens from percussion and harmonica/melodeon duo Stevens & Pound writes about her relationship with music and climate ...
To end the Colorado River Basin's megadrought, 'we just need to stop climate change,' U-M expert says. 'We know how to stop it and it's not too late ...
ZME Science on MSN
A Radical Climate Proposal Aims to Channel Seawater Into a Giant Egyptian Desert to Fight Sea Level Rise
Flooding Egypt’s vast Qattara Depression with seawater could slightly lower global sea levels and reshape climate adaptation.
15don MSNOpinion
How we created a climate change museum to inspire hope among eco-distressed students
Researchers, educators, young people and artists are collaborating to develop a ‘pedagogy of hope’ for creative climate ...
On the universal curve, performance climbs steadily as organisms warm until they reach an optimal temperature where activity ...
POWDER Magazine on MSN
New AI Weather Model Is Designed for Predicting Snow in the Mountains
The model takes normal weather models and makes them higher resolution, before delivering them to OpenSnow subscribers.
The 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference (sometimes referred to as COP30) is taking place in Brazil. Amid all the talk with politicians, policy experts and scientists, it's worth reminding ...
ARC Future Fellow and Associate Professor in Climate Science, ARC Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather, The University of Melbourne Andrew King receives funding from the Australian Research ...
COP30 ends without a fossil-fuel phase-out deal, but campaigners tell Inside Geneva why they still see reasons for optimism.
Mongabay News on MSN
Can we create new inland seas to lower sea level rise? Interview with researcher Amir AghaKouchak
Sea levels are rising, threatening coastal areas, including cities, around the world. Due to climate change, the global ocean has already risen by 21-24 centimeters (about 8-9.5 inches) since 1880, ...
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