Researchers say they have found an intimate link between rising sea surface temperatures associated with global warming and increased Atlantic hurricane activity. (LiveScience.com)
Forecasters warned that a La Nina weather pattern � the nasty flip side of El Nino � is brewing, bringing with it the threat of more hurricanes for the Atlantic. (LiveScience.com)
Residents and tourists have been told to move away from the coast of an Italian volcanic island in case its spectacular eruptions cause tidal waves, emergency services said. (Reuters)
Scientists have classified a spout of steam earlier this month at Yellowstone National Park's Steamboat geyser as a "forceful minor eruption." (Associated Press)
In Lake Superior, temperatures are rising almost twice as fast as air temperatures -- more than 4 degrees for the average surface temperature, with effects on plants, marine life, and weather. (Associated Press)
The UK has experienced its second warmest winter on record, with a mean temperature of 5.47 degrees Celsius (41.8 degrees Fahrenheit), provisional Met Office figures show. (Reuters)
A number of animal and plant species in Brazil could die out as rising world temperatures cause more droughts, disease and rainstorms in areas like the Pantanal wetlands and Amazon rainforest, according to new research. (Reuters)
The International Polar Year kicks off this week and will involve 50,000 people from 63 nations in 228 projects looking at and under polar ice, in the sea and in the atmosphere, all part of the biggest coordinated polar study in half a century. (Reuters)
Spindly orange sea stars, fan-finned ice fish and herds of roving sea cucumbers are among the exotic creatures spied off the Antarctic coast in an area formerly covered by ice, scientists reported. (Reuters)
A severe winter storm dumped snow and freezing rain across the Midwest and mid-Atlantic United States, stranding air travelers from Boston to Chicago and causing several traffic deaths. (Reuters)
Dozens of homes and businesses looked like they were shredded by "high explosives," the Arkansas lieutenant governor said as he surveyed the damage a day after a powerful storm injured 40 people. (Associated Press)
A recent report finds Sydney could slide into a near permanent state of drought, as deadly bushfires increase markedly and temperatures rise 10 or 15 degrees Fahrenheit over the next few decades. (ABC)
Indonesian engineers temporarily halted an attempt to plug a fissure that has been gushing mud for nine months, after a steel cable hoisting cement balls into the crater broke, officials said. (Associated Press)
Heavy rains from a cyclone sparked more flooding in Mozambique, worsening a humanitarian crisis that has already killed 45 people and forced 140,000 from their homes. (Reuters)
The UK government has decided that coastal areas like Happisburgh, England, experiencing the erosive effects of global warming, are no longer worth defending. (Associated Press)
A team of seven explorers is about to embark on a 1,200-mile journey across Baffin Island in the Canadian Arctic to discuss the effects of global warming on Inuit cultures, and will use the Internet to communicate with interested observers around the world. (National Public Radio)
The ground on the western edges of Naples, Italy, is rising, spurring worries of a possible volcanic eruption, but scientists now think they know exactly what is causing the uplift and may be able to better predict any potential eruption. (LiveScience.com)
A new study reveals the first direct observations of volcanic lightning, a well-known but poorly understood phenomenon. (LiveScience.com)
Cyclone Favio swept ashore in central Mozambique with sustained winds of 125 mph, bringing heavy rain and new misery to tens of thousands of people already forced from their homes by flooding. (Associated Press)
Australian forecasters said that the El Nino weather pattern blamed for the worst drought in a century had ended, and expressed cautious optimism much-needed rain was on the way. (Agence France-Presse)
Satellite images of Australia's Great Barrier Reef show that sediment from river run-off is threatening the reef at a greater rate than previously realized, Australia's peak scientific body said. (Reuters)
Australia's coastline has felt the impact of almost 50 tsunamis in the past 150 years, according to the first catalogue of all such events. (Australian Broadcasting Corp.)
Scientists believe dust from Australia's drought-stricken regions may help to slow climate change by providing iron for microscopic marine plants to grow and, in turn, absorb greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. (Australian Broadcasting Corp.)
Hundreds of concrete balls will be dropped into a "mud volcano" although experts warned it is unlikely to stop a massive mud flow which has swallowed villages and left 15,000 people homeless. (Agence France-Presse)
The year 2006 was China's hottest in half a century, with more than a third of climate observation stations on the Tibet plateau registering all-time high temperatures. (Agence France-Presse)
A scientific voyage has found the East Australian Current and the Southern Ocean may be more important to climate change than originally thought. (Australian Broadcasting Corp.)
A voyage to Antarctica's icy depths by the United Kingdom's first deep-sea remote operated vehicle has revealed a rich array of marine life and geological features that may shed light on the region's past and future. (BBC)
Levels of carbon monoxide and certain particulate at West Yellowstone and Old Faithful continue to improve, and the air quality is good, a study by the National Park Service concluded. (Associated Press)
Devastating floods in the Indonesian capital earlier this month have caused nearly one billion dollars worth of damage and losses. (Agence France-Presse)
The world's oceans are turning acidic due to the buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and scientists say the effects on marine life will be catastrophic in coming decades. (National Geographic News)
The delicate interplay between the oceans and atmosphere is changing with catastrophic consequences, making "dead zones" off the U.S. west coast much more common, wiping out populations of marine life. (BBC)
Five science satellites blasted off on a single rocket on a mission to figure out the source of powerful geomagnetic sub-storms and aurora in the Earth's atmosphere. (Associated Press)
Spurred on by unusually warm Siberia, Canada, northern Asia and Europe, the world's land areas were 3.4 degrees Fahrenheit above normal in January - the warmest ever - according to the U.S. National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, North Carolina. (Associated Press)
The Peruvian Qori Kalis glacier in the Andes could vanish in just five years, a climatologist from Ohio State University says, and may provide the clearest evidence yet of global climate change. (BBC)
There's no reason monster tornadoes couldn't hit large cities, killing thousands and causing widespread damage, say meteorologists in a new study that uses the latest tornado-chasing data to simulate the effects of a tornado outburst in Chicago. (Discovery.com)
Beneath the snow and ice of Antarctica, scientists have discovered a network of lakes that fill and empty with rapidly flowing water - a finding that may improve understanding of the interaction between global warming and melting ice. (Associated Press)
Even a small rise in the world's sea levels, predicted as a result of global warming, could make environmental refugees of some 56 million people in developing countries, a World Bank economist said. (Reuters)
Injecting carbon dioxide into wet, porous rocks deep underground may be a good way to reduce emissions of this major greenhouse gas because the rocks trap the gas better than previously thought, a new study claims. (LiveScience.com)
Some of Britain's best-loved beaches and coastline, from Golden Cap in Dorset to Formby Sands in Lancashire, are under threat from erosion and flooding, the National Trust said. (Reuters)
One person was killed and at least 19 people were injured when a tornado swept through New Orleans neighborhoods still recovering from Hurricane Katrina. (Reuters)
Researchers are planning a worldwide effort to track the movement of sea creatures tagged with tiny electronic devices that will also record ocean conditions, including temperature and salinity. (Associated Press)
Two of Greenland's largest glaciers that flow to lower elevations and the ocean are waxing and waning rapidly, researchers reported last week, suggesting that the effects of global warming on sea levels may be difficult to predict. (The Washington Post)
The village of Redfield, New York, gets a lot of snowfall during the winter, but last week's total � more than 11 feet, unofficially � might be an all-time 7-day record for the state. (Associated Press)
The ice atop Cordillera Blanca, the largest glacier chain in the tropics, is melting fast because of rising temperatures, and scientists say it is endangering future water supplies to the arid coast where most Peruvians live. (Associated Press)
Tokyo has set a record for its longest snow-less winter amid growing worldwide concerns about global warming, according to meteorologists. (Agence France-Presse)
Japan launched a satellite-based alert system that will instantly send warnings of tsunamis and updates on volcanic activity to help speed evacuations, an emergency official said. (Associated Press)
The death toll from massive flooding in Indonesia rose to 80, as some 140,000 people returned to their sodden homes in the capital to clear away piles of mud and rancid debris. (Associated Press)
International rules allowing burial of greenhouse gases beneath the seabed enter into force on Feb. 10 in what will be a step toward fighting global warming, if storage costs are cut and leaks can be averted. (Reuters)
Deep inside the Arctic Circle work is about to begin on a giant frozen Noah's Ark for food crops to provide a last bastion in the battle against global warming. (Reuters)
NASA climatologists have found that 2006 was the fifth warmest year in the past century. (USA Today)
Global warming will require more robust monitoring of hurricanes, typhoons and other disasters, mirroring systems in place to watch for tsunamis, a top U.N. official said. (Reuters)
The weather anomaly El Nino is weakening, but the outlook beyond May is cloudy, according to a monthly report by the U.S. Climate Prediction Center. (Reuters)
Five to 10 percent of the world's total carbon dioxide comes from manufacturing cement, but a new understanding about the fundamental properties of nano-sized particles could reduce this impact. (Discovery.com)
Injecting carbon dioxide emissions from electric power plants into deep underground aquifers may be a suitable long-term disposal method for the greenhouse gas, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology said. (Reuters)
While a U.N. report last week left little doubt that scientists think humans are heating the planet, it did nothing to settle the question of whether they are partly responsible for more intense hurricanes. (Reuters)
The world's poor, who are the least responsible for global warming, will suffer the most from climate change, the U.N. told environment ministers from around the world. (Reuters)
While tsunamis are primarily considered a threat on the Pacific Coast, emergency officials are paying closer attention to the potential for killer waves on the Atlantic Coast since the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed more than 200,000 people in 11 countries. (Associated Press)
El Ni�o has �collapsed,� say scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center, and if it has any effect on North America's winter and spring weather, it will be negligible. (San Diego Union Tribune)
Horse-drawn carts rescued residents from flood-stricken districts in the Indonesian capital after flooding burst riverbanks, killing at least 29 people and forcing some 340,000 to flee their homes in recent days. (Associated Press)
Cleanup efforts are continuing in Central Florida, following at least three tornadoes with winds up to 165 mph that killed at least 20 people and damaged or destroyed 1500 homes. (Associated Press)
Seismologists warned that a "catastrophic" earthquake could strike the southwestern coast of British Columbia soon. (Agence France-Presse)
International scientists and officials hailed a report saying that global warming is "very likely" caused by man, and that hotter temperatures and rises in sea level "would continue for centuries" no matter how much humans control their pollution. (Associated Press)
The tepid waters of the Amazon and Orinoco rivers may be goading modest hurricanes into super storms in South America, says a researcher studying the balmy river water at sea. (Discovery.com)
Global warming has made stronger hurricanes, including those in the Atlantic such as Katrina, an authoritative panel on climate change has concluded for the first time. (LiveScience.com)
Maps used to calculate flood danger in the U.S. rely on data that are decades out of date, according to a report that calls for a new national program to remap land levels. (Associated Press)
Canada and the United States have launched a satellite mapping project of North America to better monitor biodiversity and climate change in the region, Natural Resources Canada said. (Agence France-Presse)
A new study published in the journal Science found climate models had underestimated the rate of sea level rises, caused mostly by greenhouse gas emissions. (Australian Broadcasting Corp.)
One hundred twenty-two levees from Maryland to California are at risk of failing, according to a list released by the Army Corps of Engineers. (Associated Press)
Surges of cool waters from the depths of the Atlantic Ocean became stronger off Morocco in the 20th century, apparently because of global warming that could affect fish stocks, a study showed. (Reuters)
Chinese scientists have warned that rising temperatures on the Qinghai-Tibet plateau will melt glaciers, dry up major Chinese rivers and trigger more droughts, sandstorms and desertification, state media reported. (Reuters)