The deadly and destructive 2019 tornado season has been above-average, and shows no signs of letting up.
Author: Doyle Rice, USA TODAY
Earth’s oceans could rise over 6 feet by 2100 as polar ice melts, swamping coastal cities such as NYC
Portions of manyU.S. coastal cities could be lost to the sea by the end of the century because of global warming, a study says.
Weather forecasters urge caution for Tuesday after 18 tornadoes across five states on Monday
After18tornadoes swept through five states Monday, forecasters say Tuesday’s severe weather threat warrants caution, but lacks the same potential.
‘Extraordinary’: Almost 1/4 of West Antarctic ice is now ‘unstable’
More unsettling news from the bottom of the world.Almost one-quarter of the ice in the West Antarctic ice sheet has been classified as “unstable.”
Blue moon is coming Saturday night to a sky near you
A Blue Moon is coming this weekend. Andit’s not the craft beer nor Amazon’s new spaceship, both of which have appropriated the name.
Distant object at edge of Solar System is an ancient fragment from 4.5 billion years ago
It’s a rather uninspiring object, with no moons, rings or dust clouds in orbit around it; nor is there any evidence of an atmosphere.
Paradise lost: 400 million pieces of trash discovered on beaches of remote tropical islands
We know trash is everywhere on Earth, all the way from the top of Mount Everest to the verybottom of the ocean. Now, giant mounds of it are even washing up on the shores of otherwise pristine tropical islands in the Indian Ocean.
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Neanderthals split from modern humans much earlier than thought, study suggests
A new study suggests that modern humans and our closest relatives the Neanderthals may have split at least 800,000 years ago, hundreds of thousands of yearsearlier than had been thought.
Wild weather forecast: Feet of snow in the West; severe storms in central USA, milder East
A big change in the weather is on tap for much of the U.S. over the next few days.
The northern lights, aka ‘aurora borealis,’ could be coming to a sky near you this week
Thanks to a geomagnetic storm from the sun, skywatchers across the far northern U.S. and most of Canada this week could see the aurora borealis, aka the northern lights.