There’s a 99.9999 percent chance that humans are the cause of global warming, a new studyreported. This means we’ve reached the”gold standard” for certainty.
Author: Doyle Rice, USA TODAY
New normal? We’re actually getting used to weird weather, study says
The weather has gotten weirder lately… but since we’re getting used to it, we think it’s normal. So we’re like frogs that don’t jump out of slowly warming water.
Climate change could zap clouds, bake the Earth even more
Some of the world’s cloudscould disappearif the carbon dioxide we keep pumping intoour atmosphere soars to extreme levels, a new study suggests.
‘Bomb cyclone’ strikes: 650,000 powerless from fierce winds
Ferocious winds from a potent ‘bomb cyclone’ roared across the eastern U.S. Monday, leaving hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses powerless.
‘It’s snowing in Hollywood!’ Snowflakes seen in and around Los Angeles
Forget the red carpet Sunday, the Oscars may have a white carpet!
What killed the dinosaurs? An asteroid or volcanoes? Or both?
Maybe it wasn’t just the asteroid that killed off most of the dinosaurs 66 million years ago: Research reveals howvolcanoes may have played a role.
Neptune’s new moon Hippocamp is so tiny that it wasn’t detected in 1989 during flyby, scientists report
A new moon was found near Neptune, joining the other 13 we knewabout. It’s so small that it wasn’t detected during the Voyager 2 flyby in 1989.
Buckle up and hunker down: Coast-to-coast storm to bring weather misery to 200 million
A powerful storm will roar across the country over the next 2-3 days, spreading heavy snow, torrential rain, and crippling ice to more than 200 million Americans.
Super Moon? Snow Moon? Full moon? Whatever you call it, a lunar spectacle is coming Monday night/Tuesday morning
Whether you call it full, snow or super, the biggest, brightest moon of the year is coming to a sky near you Monday night/Tuesday morning.
Wreck of long-lost WWII aircraft carrier USS Hornet found after 76 years, nearly 17,500 feet under water
For 76 years, she lay on the ocean floor, a quiet tomb for 140 sailors who died the day she sank. Now, for the first time since then, humans have laid eyes on the Hornet.