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The Curious Case of Hurricane Isaac and Colliding Storms

The Curious Case of Hurricane Isaac and Colliding Storms

Although we’re still in the thick of an unusually active hurricane season, and despite the fact that the recovery from Hurricane Isaac has barely begun, the U.S. seems safe for the moment from tropical storms. Out in the Atlantic, Tropical Storm Leslie has graduated to hurricane status, making it the sixth hurricane of the year, but while it’s … Read More

Yes, Summers in the U.S. Really Are Getting Warmer

Yes, Summers in the U.S. Really Are Getting Warmer

One of the surest signs that the planet is getting warmer is the fact that record high temperatures are outpacing record lows. As of early August, for example we were able to report that with the year a little more than half over, 2012 had already surpassed all of 2011 in terms of record highs in the U.S. It’s unfair to compare just two years, of … Read More

NASA Drones to Spy on Hurricanes, Storm Intensity

NASA Drones to Spy on Hurricanes, Storm Intensity

NASA will begin sending drones into the teeth of oncoming storms to get a better handle on hurricane intensity evolution.… Read More

Scientists Warn of a World Forced into Vegetarianism

Scientists Warn of a World Forced into Vegetarianism

Leading water scientists have issued one of the sternest warnings yet about global food supplies, saying that the world's population may have to switch almost completely to a vegetarian diet over the next 40 years to avoid catastrophic shortages. Humans derive about 20 percent of their protein from animal-based products now, but this may need to d… Read More

Italians Pack Speedos as Dolomites See Soaring Temps

Italians Pack Speedos as Dolomites See Soaring Temps

Mountain trekkers, packing essentials before heading for the glaciers in the Italian Dolomite mountains, are taking an extra piece of kit — swimming trunks. As Italy sweats through a hot summer, climbers reaching 8,200 feet have been stripping off and plunging into the glacial lake at Antermoia, which is usually icy cold in August and frozen in th… Read More

Raging Fire Season Highlights Human Cost of Firefighting

Raging Fire Season Highlights Human Cost of Firefighting

Earlier this month, a 20-year-old digging a fire line in the Idaho mountains was killed by a falling tree, making her the 12th person to die in forest firefighting operations around the country this year. When I attended her funeral a few days later, nearly 300 of her fellow U.S. Forest Service firefighters lined up outside Moscow, Idaho’s, Church … Read More

Encroaching Seas Pit Parking Against Preservation

Encroaching Seas Pit Parking Against Preservation

CHINCOTEAGUE NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE, Va. — A sign at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service visitor center here states a simple motto: "Where Wildlife Comes First." But many visitors never see the sign, or much wildlife. Cars stream past the center on hot summer days, headed for a mile-long public beach at the refuge's southern end. The prime goals … Read More

Report: Lack of Sunspots Trigger Frigid Winters in Europe

Report: Lack of Sunspots Trigger Frigid Winters in Europe

A new report published in Geophysical Research Letters shows the link between the 11-year sunspot cycle and colder winter. It’s well known that the Sun varies slightly in brightness every 11 years, and while those changes pale beside the effect of human-generated greenhouse gases, they’re enough to trigger unusually cold winters in Central Europe.… Read More