Up to 70% of noble fir seedlings died off this summer in Oregon, meaning the ghost of climate change present will further ruin the future.
Climate models are usually run on supercomputers. But Amazon has donated cloud computing time to run a model—with a twist.
Record rains have led to floods and mudslides across Washington and British Columbia. A new map puts it all in perspective.
A massive snowstorm kept pubgoers trapped at the Tan Hill Inn for an unexpected long weekend with an Oasis cover band.
There's something soothing about the dull thud of explosions followed by a cloud of dust as fossil fuel infrastructure comes tumbling down.
Sure, getting to where the polar bears are is carbon-intensive. But the last mile to visit them is now electric.
A week removed from heartbreaking flooding, another fire hose of precipitation is slated to hit British Columbia and Washington.
The Pentagon would like you to know that it is part of the solution to climate change.
We've reached the point where the collapse of the Arctic biosphere is available for consumption. It's a heady feeling to hold death in your hands.
The 30 to 50 feral hogs tweet has never been more prescient.
The best antidote to stave off further climate breakdown is for people to get more engaged in agitating for solutions.
The forthcoming Netflix movie is about an comet hitting Earth. We are the freaking comet, people.
Please shed a tear for the world's leading gas exporters who are suffering from "cancel culture" because their product is destroying the planet.
The Rockies are more likely to see snow than wildfires at this time of year, but here we are, with a blaze near Estes Park, CO, forcing evacuations.
The future of Earth is becoming a national park that humans will visit for the weekend while spending most of their lives in space.
As governments lurch toward an agreement in Glasgow, this is what the people want from them—and all of society.
Steel is one of the defining materials of the modern world. But we'll have to learn how to make it anew.
The conference has prided itself on trying to reduce its carbon footprint wherever possible. That doesn't extend to the fridges, apparently.
Costa Rica and Denmark are leading the world's first concrete effort to stop the climate crisis in its tracks.
Standing knee-deep in the sea, the minister of one of the world's most at-risk nations, delivered a message to delegates who will decide Tuvalu's fate.