Nature for nerds
Good news: He's gone. Bad news: Someone else will pick up the climate disinformation mantle.
Severe drought conditions throughout the U.S. last year lowered the reservoir's water levels and revealed several sets of human remains.
Less than a year after the Senator helped pass a historic piece of climate legislation, he says he'd potentially vote to repeal it.
According to entomologists, nymphs are hatching in late April and early May, and they need to be eradicated before they can reproduce.
Climate court cases are about to get a lot more interesting.
Politico reports that Justice Gorsuch did not list the buyer of the property on financial disclosure documents.
The cheapest electric vehicle on the U.S. market is soon to be no more. R.I.P. to EV accessibility, hello to more energy-guzzling trucks.
Faux concern is the name of the game as Republicans begin to admit the climate is in trouble.
Just last year, the river was seeing all-time low water levels, which disrupted cargo shipments and recreation.
California is experiencing a "superbloom" after a super-wet winter.
Retardants help to stop the spread of wildfires, but the chemicals often end up in waterways.
The $30 billion barrier may fail to block climate-fueled storm surge—and won’t prevent other urban flooding in Houston.
The Biden administration will release plans to regulate emissions from power plants this week—a move almost certain to spark a legal battle.
Researchers stumbled upon "an amazing live orange carpet" of coral "as far as the eye could see."
There’s no question that this holiday, which started from radical beginnings, has largely become the purview of greenwashing and PR spin.
Frozen polar waters host a critical species of algae. Accumulating plastic particles could threaten the whole ecosystem.
Critical sea turtle breeding locations are at risk of flooding, and soon.
Simple filters could help remove microfiber pollution from your laundry. But experts say a broader portfolio of solutions is needed to address the problem.
Field workers, many of whom are undocumented, are struggling financially since a series of atmospheric rivers brought extreme weather to California.
Rare footage from thousands of feet underwater shows never-before-mapped areas of the ocean floor.