Coral Bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef May Get a Lot Worse in the Future
Climate change could alter temperature patterns in a way that stops corals from preparing for bleaching events
Coastal Cities Need to Radically Rethink How They Deal With Rising Waters
“Transitional architecture” is both a futuristic solution to sea-level rise and a hearkening back to older ways of living
Is This the Quietest Square Inch in the U.S.?
An acoustic ecologist reveals his findings
A Firsthand Account of What It Takes to Pilot a Voyaging Canoe Across the Ocean
More than just a desire to learn, a seat aboard the historic vessel Hōkūle`a requires skill, dedication and well, …obsession
Why Rockfalls Happen on Beautiful Days in Yosemite
Temperatures drive rocks to expand and contract—until one lovely day when slabs may suddenly fall
How Do Butterflies Fly and More Questions From Our Readers
You asked, we answered
When Dinosaurs Roamed the (Not Yet) Petrified Forest
Recent surprise discoveries at the national park have prompted a complete rethinking about the creatures of the Jurassic Era
DIY Cartographers Are Putting Slums on the Literal Map
When a community makes its way onto a map, it’s that much harder to deny, say activists.
Caves Can Now Help Scientists Trace Ancient Wildfires
But the chemical clues for fire add an unexpected snarl for researchers using those same caves to track climate change
A New Weapon in the War on Weeds: Flamethrowers
Long used in agriculture, land managers are now wondering whether cooking weeds to death is better than pesticides
Imagining an Alarming Future at Brazil’s Museum of Tomorrow
The ambitious museum looks at where humankind is headed—and asks how they’ll live in a post-climate-change world
Mysterious Fairy Circles Have Been Found in Western Australia
Once thought to exist only in Namibia, circles spotted 6,200 miles away are helping sort out how these odd features form
Journey to the Center of Earth
San Andreas May Have Had Help Triggering a Historic Earthquake
New evidence about a devastating quake in 1812 hints that the San Jacinto fault may be a bigger seismic risk than anyone thought
Twitter May Be Faster Than FEMA Models for Tracking Disaster Damage
Real-time online activity could provide speedier assessments as disaster unfolds than tools currently used by the government agency
These Watercolor Paintings Actually Include Climate Change Data
Jill Pelto, an artist and scientist, incorporates graphs of rising sea levels and soaring temperatures in her artwork
It Might Be Impossible to Turn Back the Clock on Altered Ecosystems
“Rewilding” landscapes to return them to a natural state might sometimes be ineffective and even harmful
“Termites of the Sea” Found Munching Wood Near Arctic Shipwrecks
The shipworms found in Svalbard may signal an expansion due to ocean warming or be a new species
Journey to the Center of Earth
Inner Earth Is Teeming With Exotic Forms of Life
More than a mile below the surface, our planet supports diverse creatures that could give us clues about life across the solar system
The Size of the California Methane Leak Isn’t the Scariest Part of the Story
The Aliso Canyon leak doubled Los Angeles’ methane emissions—and it’s just one disaster we were lucky enough to find
Journey to the Center of Earth
We Finally Know How Much the Dino-Killing Asteroid Reshaped Earth
The impact that wiped out large dinosaurs also dumped hundreds of feet of debris in the ocean off the Yucatán peninsula
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