An ocean dead zone off Oregon that killed fish, crabs and sea worms in an area bigger than Rhode Island last summer lasted nearly three times longer than any of its predecessors, scientists said. (Associated Press)
Large species of coral that form underwater reefs and create rich marine habitat are disappearing from around the U.S. Virgin Islands, Jamaica and elsewhere in the Caribbean, a leading researcher said. (Associated Press)
The industrialized world's emissions of greenhouse gases are growing again, despite efforts under the Kyoto Protocol to cap them and stave off global warming, the United Nations reported. (Associated Press)
Typhoon Cimaron, the strongest storm to hit the Philippines in eight years, churned out to the South China Sea after bringing the rural north of the archipelago to a near standstill. (Reuters)
A recent study shows how satellites that survey the Earth's surface provide a continuous overview of global climate and help identify where extreme land surface temperatures are occurring more frequently. (Christian Science Monitor)
Climate change could devastate the global economy on a scale of the two world wars and the depression of the 1930s if left unchecked, a top economist formerly with the World Bank has warned. (CNN)
Britain issued a call for urgent action on climate change after a hard-hitting report painted an apocalyptic picture of the economic and environmental fallout from further global warming. (Reuters)
Much of the 200 miles of Belize's coral reef has been "bleached" in the last decade and some scientists warn it is likely to die, a victim of global warming. (Reuters)
New sensors may soon be installed on airliners to measure weather conditions every few seconds as early tests with NASA and the National Weather Service detected tornadic conditions earlier and helped predict heavy storms, temperatures and fog more accurately. (Associated Press)
A massive underwater landslide in Lake Tahoe thousands of years ago caused a tsunami and left ripple-like stony ridges on the lake bottom, according to a new study. (Associated Press)
A new global survey of thunderstorm activity using NASA satellite data has helped meteorologists pinpoint exactly where Earth�s hotspots for intense thunderstorms are: the American Midwest, Argentina, and some semi-arid regions like the edges of the Sahara desert. (LiveScience.com)
A new study suggests that large amounts of hot, dry, dust-laden air coming off West Africa may squelch Atlantic hurricanes, and is likely at least partly responsible for this season's relative lack of activity. (Christian Science Monitor)
The world's oceans were once steamier than a hot tub, scientists say as hot as 158 degrees Fahrenheit, until a period of global cooling made advanced life on Earth possible. (Associated Press)
Measurements from a network of monitors stretching across the Atlantic Ocean could offer an early warning of "sudden climate change," United Kingdom scientists report. (BBC)
The remnants of Tropical Storm Paul made landfall on Mexico's mainland, triggering floods that caused mostly superficial damage to 5,000 houses, officials said. (Associated Press)
Deforestation in the Amazon rain forest has declined to its lowest level since 1991 due to strict enforcement of environmental regulations, the Brazilian government said. (Associated Press)
Haze polluting the Arctic has thickened in the past decade despite lower emissions by Russian factories, perhaps because of more forest fires or pollution from Asia, an international report said. (Reuters)
Deforestation in the Amazon rain forest has declined to its lowest level since 1991 due to strict enforcement of environmental regulations, the Brazilian government said. (Associated Press)
The rise of the Appalachian Mountains seems to have triggered an ice age 450 million years ago by sucking carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, researchers report. (New Scientist)
Researchers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and other government and private agencies fear more than half the world's coral reefs could die in less than 25 years and that global warming may at least partly to blame. (Associated Press)
Global warming could substantially raise sea levels around New York City over the next century and put the Big Apple at greater risk of being flooded by hurricanes, a new NASA computer model predicts. (LiveScience.com)
Carrying 16 instruments each, two NASA satellites have been launched to help scientists predict the billion-ton eruptions of electrified gas and deadly particles known as coronal mass ejections that cause the Northern Lights and can disrupt power grids on Earth. (The New York Times)
A swarm of more than 70 small earthquakes shook the ground near Old Faithful geyser earlier this month, lasting several hours on Oct. 14, according to the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. (Associated Press)
Hurricane Paul weakened to a tropical storm, easing the threat to rain-sodden resorts at the tip of the Baja California peninsula. (Associated Press)
The world's largest river, the Amazon, once flowed from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific, the opposite of its present direction, a study shows. (BBC)
The flat rock slabs at Isle La Motte, Vermont, at the northern end of Lake Champlain offer a history of the last half billion years of this area, which was washed by a warm equatorial sea and saw long-extinct plants and animals congregate in what is believed to be the earliest ancestor of modern coral reefs. (Associated Press)
Hurricane Paul strengthened to a Category 2 storm off Mexico's western coast and churned toward the southern tip of Baja, California, forecasters said. (Associated Press)
Torrential rains caused flooding in parts of southern Greece, just three days after storms triggered a state of emergency elsewhere in the region, authorities said. (AFP)
Scientists (from what organization?) have found 200 "dead zones" in the world's oceans � places where pollution threatens fish, other marine life and the people who depend on them. (Associated Press)
This year's Antarctic ozone hole is the biggest ever, government scientists said, caused by human-produced gases such as bromine and chlorine that damage the ozone layer. (Associated Press)
The vast sheet of ice that covers Greenland is shrinking fast, but still not as fast as previous research indicated, NASA scientists said. (Reuters)
MetOp, Europe's most sophisticated weather and climate satellite, was launched successfully from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. (BBC)
A climate researcher at the University of Washington says Pacific Northwest winters will be getting grayer and rainier over the next 50 to 100 years. (Associated Press)
Droughts and storms will become more intense in the coming century if levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere keep rising, according to scientists using several new computer models. (Associated Press)
Exotic microbes living around mud volcanoes on the seabed are helping to offset global warming by munching heat-trapping methane seeping from the depths, scientists said. (Reuters)
Glaciers in the Himalayas have not drastically shrunk despite global warming and are unlikely to melt away in coming decades, a Chinese scientist said. (Reuters)
Scientists at the British Antarctic Survey say they have found the first direct evidence linking the collapse of an ice shelf in Antarctica to global warming widely blamed on human activities. (Reuters)
Another massive earthquake could strike the Hawaiian isles at any time, but the recent 6.7 magnitude tremor does not signal an increase in ground-shaking activity, researchers said. (Associated Press)
Though blighted, coral reefs discovered off Madagascar may provide the seeds of recovery for marine life devastated by rising sea temperatures, researchers say. (National Geographic News)
Thousands of Alaska's lakes have shrunk and many others have dried up over the past 50 years, scientists have discovered, and during this period the state has experienced a steady warming trend. (National Geographic News)
Singapore has maintained a health advisory as the pollution index soared above the unhealthy range due to smoke from forest fires in neighboring Indonesia. (AFP)
They are the very lowest rung of the marine food chain, but microscopic plants in the world's oceans generate five times more power than is consumed by all the humans in the world, according to a new study by researchers at Florida State University. (Associated Press)
A powerful 6.6-magnitude earthquake and repeated aftershocks rattled Hawaii, knocking out power but causing no injuries or extensive structural damage, agencies reported. (Reuters)
A long-dormant volcano about 200 miles south of Anchorage, Alaska, began spewing gases last month, and scientists have quickly installed new seismic monitors to gather more information. (National Public Radio)
A land bridge between Alaska and Siberia flooded to make the Bering Strait 11,000 years ago, more than 1,000 years earlier than previously thought, researchers reported. (Reuters)
An early snow storm caused havoc in western New York state, including the Buffalo area, with up to two feet of snowfall leaving roads blocked and power lines down, officials said. (AFP)
A University of Arizona scientist reported that data from some 30 computer-modeling studies shows that by mid-century annual average temperatures in the West will be up 4 or 5 degrees. (Associated Press)
Within the next 50 years, ice and snow will disappear from Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest mountain, and Mount Kenya, the second-highest, if deforestation and industrial pollution is not stopped, environmentalists report. (Associated Press)
More than 10,000 Alaskan lakes have dried up or shrunk in size in a span of 52 years, scientists reported, as the state experiences longer growing seasons, increased thawing of permafrost, and greater water loss from evaporation. (LiveScience.com)
Massive peat bogs in Siberia and elsewhere may have helped spur global warming at the end of the last ice age some 12,000 years ago, scientists reported. (Reuters)
A new survey of coral reefs along Madagascar's southwestern coast found massive damage from coral bleaching caused by rising sea temperatures, researchers said. (Associated Press)
Sea surface temperatures give scientists information about ocean currents, climate, and how a hurricane may evolve, and now NASA has a web page that provides frequent updates on ocean temperatures. (Technology News Daily)
Scientists have discovered a way to improve storm surge forecasting for the Gulf Coast after studying the topography of Florida and flooding from last year's Hurricane Dennis. (Associated Press)
Wobbles or variations in the Earth's orbit and tilt are associated with extinctions of rodent and mammalian species, Dutch scientists said. (Reuters)
The much-feared El Nino, now forming in equatorial waters of the Pacific, is unlikely to be as severe as the one in 1997-98, which would be a relief to coffee, cocoa, and grain farmers in Southeast Asia. (Reuters)
A weak El Nino under way in the Pacific Ocean should contribute to a mild winter for much of the United States, the National Weather Service reported. (Associated Press)
Researchers have discovered a link between Atlantic hurricane activity and thick clouds of dust that periodically rise up from the Sahara Desert. (BBC)
Scientists using NASA satellites and computer models have shown that pollutants from Central American biomass burning can influence air quality and climate in the United States. (United Press International)
A magnitude 4.5 earthquake rattled homes east of Washington's Mount Rainier, but officials say they don't think it is related to volcanic activity. (Associated Press)
Tropical storm Norman formed far off Mexico's Baja California coast, but was expected to lose strength as it headed toward land. (Associated Press)
Millions of people could become homeless in the Asia-Pacific region by 2070 due to rising sea levels, with Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, China and Pacific islands most at risk, says Australia's top scientific body. (Reuters)
Smoke from Indonesian brush fires darkened skies across Southeast Asia, sending air pollution levels soaring in at least two other nations. (Associated Press)
A volcanic eruption on the Papua New Guinea island of New Britain caused panicked residents to flee homes and sent ash plumes 11 miles into the air. (Reuters)
About three-quarters of today's marine creatures originated in the tropics and spread outward toward the poles, while only one-quarter originated at higher latitudes, says research published in the journal Science. (Associated Press)
The World Health Organization called on governments to improve air quality in their cities, saying air pollution prematurely kills two million people a year, with more than half the deaths in developing countries. (Associated Press)
NASA satellite data indicates El Nino has returned to the tropical Pacific Ocean, although in a relatively weak condition that may not persist. (NASA.gov)
Flooding killed dozens of people in the days after Typhoon Xangsane raked the Philippines and Vietnam, officials said, as the combined death toll rose to at least 169. (Reuters)
Summers in the Arctic Circle could be ice-free in about 50 years if current melting trends continue, according to new projections by scientists at the National Snow and Ice Data Center. (ABC)
Sewage is a growing threat to oceans and seas putting marine life and habitats at greater risk as the pollution problem worsens, the United Nations Environment Program said in a report. (Reuters)
A bad storm in Alaska last October generated an ocean swell that broke apart a giant iceberg near Antarctica six days later, U.S. researchers reported. (Reuters)
Using forest plots and precipitation projections that match anticipated future levels, researchers find that drought conditions significantly enhance leaf decomposition in forests. (New York Times)
NASA satellite data was used to help monitor the health of Florida's coral reef as part of a field research effort completed this August and September. (PhysOrg.com)
A new tropical storm is heading for the Philippines, threatening to disrupt relief efforts in the aftermath of Typhoon Xangsane, which killed 76. (AFP)
The "ozone hole" over Antarctica this year has matched the record size of 11.4 million square miles, the U.N. weather agency said, equaling the record set in 2000. (Associated Press)
A small earthquake sent rocks tumbling onto a road in Acadia National Park and burst water pipes, but no injuries were reported, officials said. (Associated Press)
Lightning information gleaned by space instruments may help NASA scientists and weather forecasters better understand dangerous weather patterns and help minimize danger to lives and property. (NASA.gov)
Typhoon Xangsane was downgraded to a tropical storm as it moved inland from the central Vietnam coast, where it killed two people, injured at least 80 others and damaged hundreds of homes. (Associated Press)
Hurricane Isaac raced over the north Atlantic toward Newfoundland, where the Canadian Meteorological Service upgraded a tropical storm watch to a tropical storm warning. (Associated Press)