Scientists say that the powerful greenhouse gas methane is escaping from the sea bed off Norway as the ice it is trapped in melts. (BBC News) more...
Hurricanes can do a lot of damage, but can they do any good? (Discovery News) more...
Amateur meteorologists now have a host of options to track developing storms, from Twitter feeds to Facebook status updates. (Christian Science Monitor Horizons Blog) more...
We might grow more crops thanks to all the CO2 we're pumping into the atmosphere – but they'll be poorer quality and not as good for us. (New Scientist) more...
Particulate pollution born overseas that floats into Canada, Mexico and the United States accounts for 6,600 premature deaths each year, a team of researchers found. (Discovery News) more...
Regular wobbles in the Earth's tilt were responsible for the global warming episodes that interspersed prehistoric ice ages, according to new evidence. (Discovery News) more...
High-tech sensor pods were recently air lifted into the mouth of a volcano to monitor hot spots and provide early warning if the peak starts to blow. (Live Science) more...
The average sea surface temperature was 1.06 degrees higher than the 20th-century average of 61.5 degrees. (The New York Times) more...
Air pollution in eastern China is altering rainfall patterns there, resulting in fewer days of light rain, American and Chinese researchers reported. (The New York Times) more...
One of the largest glaciers in Antarctica is thinning four times faster than it was ten years ago, according to research seen by the BBC. (BBC News) more...
Hurricanes in the Atlantic are more frequent than at any time in the last 1,000 years, according to research just published in the journal Nature. (BBC News) more...
More than 20,000 lives a year could be saved if major industrial regions cut their emissions of ozone-triggering gases by a fifth, a new study found. (New Scientist) more...
From the highest peaks of the Himalayas to the flat-topped rises found in Canada, the height of Earth’s mountains may be controlled more by climate-influenced glaciers than the tectonic uplift of Earth's surface, a new study finds. (Live Science) more...
The past decade has been the most intense period of hurricane activity since the medieval ages, according to a new study that found that conditions were ideal for hurricanes about 1,000 years ago. (National Public Radio) more...
NASA's new program prepares young Earth scientists to tackle tough environmental issues -- in an airplane laboratory, students study everything from the growth of unusual algae blooms to the methane from a dairy cow's burp. (National Public Radio) more...
Carbon dioxide isn't just affecting our climate, it is also increasing the acidity of our seas, and scientists worry that corrosive conditions will harm marine life, and could change our oceans in ways they're just now starting to understand. (National Public Radio) more...
A squadron of 'spiderbots' inside Mount St. Helens is the first network of volcano sensors that can automatically communicate with each other and with satellites, rather than sending data to a base station first. (New Scientist) more...
French winegrowers are reaping the benefits of satellite imagery to improve their grape harvests, in a fusion of cutting-edge technology and the ancient art of winemaking. (Discovery News) more...
Earlier studies had recorded an increase in the hum's intensity when storm-generated waves hit coasts, but no one had pinpointed the exact coasts involved until a new study that found it's the west coasts of Europe and parts of the Americas that are the main sources of the sound. (National Geographic News) more...
A computer simulation developed by oceanographers in the United States could help locate where and when "rogue" monster waves, which present a major risk to ships and offshore platforms, are most likely to occur. (BBC News) more...
The Arctic Ocean has given up tens of thousands more square miles of ice in a relentless summer of melt, with scientists watching through satellite eyes for a possible record low polar ice cap. (Associated Press/CBS News) more...
The use of geo-engineering to slow global warming may increase the risk of drought, according to a new study. (BBC News) more...
As the climate gets warmer and dryer, forest fires will become as much as three times more common in parts of the American West, and as a result, air quality will suffer and so will our ability to breathe, found a new study. (Discovery News) more...
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory's latest mission is a bit closer to home: helping Los Angeles save water and energy while cutting the sprawling metropolis’s greenhouse gas emissions. (The New York Times, Green Inc.) more...
Satellites have captured a snapshot of the Ganges delta, the world’s largest river delta and one of the most geographically turbulent spots in the world. (Live Science) more...
Researchers say the accumulation of water deep beneath earthquake zones in New Zealand is contributing to its shaky reputation. (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) more...
Before the 2009 Atlantic hurricane season kicked off on June 1, forecasters were calling for 12 named storms, with about half developing into hurricanes, but now about two months into the season, zero storms have formed in the Atlantic. (National Geographic News) more...
From 2006 through 2009, Central Asia's vast Aral Sea dramatically retreated, with its eastern section losing about 80 percent of its water in just four years. (National Geographic News) more...
Without drastic cuts in greenhouse-gas emissions, the Transpolar Drift, one of the Arctic's most powerful currents and a key disperser of pollutants, is likely to disappear because of global warming. (New Scientist) more...
Combining global rainfall projections and 20 computer models, researchers have created the world's first visual atlas of global rainfall projections over the next century. (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) more...
Supershear earthquakes are the fastest thing underground -- and they tear along hidden "superhighways" in areas previously not considered at risk . (New Scientist) more...
New smart-phone applications may enable the public to help scientists monitor invasive species and collect data in a fraction of the time it normally takes. (National Geographic News) more...