Arctic Report Card, released December 10, scientists from 11 countries, with expertise ranging from wildlife to wildfire and ...
The Arctic can feel like a far-off place, disconnected from daily life if you aren't one of the 4 million people who live there.
For millennia, the tundra regions of the Arctic drew in carbon from the atmosphere and locked it in permafrost. That is the ...
The Arctic tundra is no longer the carbon sink it once was. "The tundra, which is experiencing warming and increased wildfire ...
Fires, intensified by climate change, release carbon trapped in soil and plants. More frequent infernos have now transformed ...
Snow Pit Measurements, Version 1 data set is now available at the NASA National Snow and Ice Data Center Distributed Active Archive Center (NSIDC DAAC). This data set presents snow pit measurements ...
Welcome to The Hill’s Sustainability newsletter{beacon} Sustainability Sustainability The Big Story Nuclear industry tiptoes toward renaissance Step by halting step, the U.S.
Rising temperatures, increasing precipitation, thawing permafrost and melting ice are pushing the Arctic outside its ...
Mike and Ryan discussed everything from a new “climate emergency” detailed in a federal report, to Mike’s plans for the future after TV news, to the origins of the now-famous “tornado dance” and more.
The Arctic is now a carbon source, instead of a carbon sink, according to a new report released by NOAA. Warming temperatures ...
NOAA scientists have documented profound change in the frozen north as U.S. government science itself faces an uncertain ...
Arctic tundra is releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere as hotter temperatures melt frozen ground and wildfires ...