The U.S. military is realizing that accelerating floods, heat waves, and other disasters are likely to cause it some big problems.
Warmer weather has made the frigid continent more hospitable to two flowering plants, which are now proliferating.
A reservoir in Spain has plunged to historically low levels, revealing a modern-day Atlantis.
After a few years getting their own House (of X) sorted, the X-Men are thrust back into Marvel Comics' wider shenanigans.
Volcanic ash is threatening drinking water supplies while a damaged fiber optic cables make outside communication a challenge.
Season 6, episode 6, "Babylon's Ashes," offered an action-packed yet poignant farewell to the much-loved Amazon Studios.
A colony 1,000 feet below the ocean's surface contains an unprecedented number of the prehistoric-looking fish.
Scientists are dispatching the autonomous sub and a host of other instruments to get a detailed view of the what's going on under Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier.
A study found that the risk of deadly dehydration will only increase on a common border crossing route.
Season 6's third episode, "Force Projection," also finds Marco Inaros ascending to a new tier of villainy.
This year's Arctic Report Card shows that as the region becomes busier, it's also becoming more polluted.
"We’re watching a world do things we haven’t seen before" isn't something you want to hear to describe Antarctica's most imperiled ice.
A 2,500-mile journey across Antarctica could hold lessons for future Moon and Mars missions.
Everything you need to remember before Amazon Prime Video's sci-fi hit returns for its final season.
The disaster is still unfolding as record rains continue to send rivers over their banks. That's led to some unique rescues.
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.
Amphipods may not have the same big-name appeal as seals and penguins, but they're key members of the Antarctic ecosystem. Let us honor them.
They’re calling it an “apogee kick motor,” but the object’s true identity and purpose remain unknown.
"These days, hurricane modification is considered almost a kind of fringe science. But that wasn’t always the case."
Darker Earth? Bigger crabs? Shifting poles? Yup, they're all tied to climate change.