Skip to main content
Menu
Climate
.gov
Science & information for a climate-smart nation
Main Menu
Main menu
News & Features
Home
All News & Features
Blogs
ENSO Blog
Polar Vortex Blog
Beyond the Data Blog
Climate And ...
Climate Case Studies
Climate Dashboard
Event Tracker
Climate Q&A
Featured Images
Climate Tech
Videos
Decision Makers Take 5
Decision Makers Toolbox
El Niño & La Niña Page
NOAA Greenhouse Gas
Features
News & Research Highlights
Understanding Climate
View News & Features section
Maps & Data
Home
All Maps & Data
Climate Dashboard
Climate Data Primer
Data Snapshots
Dataset Gallery
Tools & Interactives
View Maps & Data section
Teaching Climate
Home
Climate Dashboard
All Teaching Climate
Activity
Curricula
Demos & Experiments
Video
Visualization
Climate Literacy Guide
Teaching Energy
Toolbox for Climate & Energy
Partnership with CLEAN collection
View Teaching Climate section
Resilience Toolkit
About
About Us
Contact
What's New
FAQs
Sitemap
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
YouTube
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
YouTube
Search
Search
powered by
webLyzard
technology
Breadcrumb
Home
News & Features
News Research Highlights
42071
39.76
-76.18
All
News & Research Highlights
Featured Images
Videos
Event Tracker
Climate Q&A
ENSO Blog
Blogs
Beyond the Data
Climate Case Studies
Climate Tech
Climate and ...
Decision Maker's Toolbox
Features
Understanding Climate
Decision Makers Take 5
Filter by
Clear All
Topics
Climate System
Global Energy Balance
Orbital Cycles
Long-term Cycles
Seasons
Solar Radiation
Atmospheric Composition
Greenhouse Gases
Aerosols
Evolution of Atmosphere
Greenhouse Effect
Atmospheric Circulation
Hadley Cells
Coreolis Effect
Ocean and Climate
Heat Capacity of Water
Thermohaline Circulation
Thermal Expansion
Climate Feedbacks
Albedo
Deforestation
Water Cycle
Carbon Cycle
Biogeochemical Processes
Sources and Sinks
Regional Climates
Climate Compared to Weather
Causes of Climate Change
Cyclical and Natural Changes
El Nino, La Nina, ENSO
Other Oscillations
Volcanic Eruptions
Solar Output Variability
Seasonal Variability
Long-term Variability
Anthropogenic Changes
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Land Use Changes
Measuring and Modeling Climate
Climate Data
Measurements and Observations
Proxy Data
Paleoclimate Records
Global Climate Modeling
Climate Projections
Climate Reconstructions
Scenario Development
Human Responses to Climate
Mitigation Strategies
Emissions Reduction
Carbon-free Energy
Land Use Changes
Carbon Capture and Storage
Adaptation Strategies
Retrofitting Infrastructure
New Infrastructure
Social Innovation
Risk Management
Personal Responsibility
Nature of Climate Science
Process of Science
Common Misconceptions
Energy Use
Carbon Capture and Storage
Fossil Fuels
Nuclear Energy
Solar Energy
Wind Energy
Other Alternatives
Efficiency and Conservation
Usage Trends
Energy Policy
Energy Infrastructure
Climate Impacts
Sea Level Rise
Extreme Weather
Heavy Precipitation/Floods
Heat Waves
Drought
Hurricanes and Storms
Ecosystem Changes
Plants and Animals
Melting Ice and Permafrost
Ocean Warming / Acidification
Availability of Water Resources
Drought
Agricultural Changes / Food Security
National Security
Public Health
Economic Impacts
Categories
News
How the Climate System Works
Climate Change & Global Warming
Natural Climate Patterns
Climate Impacts
Observing & Predicting
Policy & Planning
Extreme Events
Date
Past 30 Days
Past 6 months
Past year
Past 3 years
Authors
Aaron Levine
Adam B. Smith
Adam Lang
Adam Sobel
Adapted from the Fifth National Climate Assessment
Ahira Sánchez-Lugo
Alison Stevens
Allison Gillespie
Amara Huddleston
Amber Liggett
American Meteorological Society
Amy Butler
Amy Dusto
Amy Solomon
Analise Keeney
Ángel Muñoz
Anne Getzin, M.D.
Anthony Arguez
Anthony Barnston
Arezu Sarvestani
Arron Layns
Art DeGaetano
Ashley Miller
Audra Luscher
Audrey Rubel
Barb Deluisi
Benjamin Kirtman
Breanna Zavadoff
Brian Brettschneider
Brian Kahn
Brian Zimmerman
Bruce Bauer
Caitlin Coomber
Caitlin Valentine
Caitlyn Kennedy
Carl Schreck
Chiara Lepore
Chris Fenimore
Chris Landsea
Chris Zervas
Christina Dierkes
Clara Deck
Climate.gov Staff
Cody Sullivan
Dale C. S. Destin
Dan Stillman
Daniel Strain
Daniel Vimont
David G. Gordon
David Herring
Deborah Seiler
Deke Arndt
Dennis Hartmann
Derek Lemoine
Dr. Andrew Watkins
Emily Becker
Emily Greenhalgh
Emily Harwitz
Eric Guilyardi
Erica Goldman
Esperanza Stancioff
Esther Conrad
Fiona Martin
Francesco Fiondella
Franz Philip Tuchen (Cooperative Institute For Marine And Atmospheric Studies)
Gabe Vecchi
Gerry Bell
Gil Compo
GIllen Curren
Global Precipitation Climatology Project
Global Precipitation Climatology Project (University of Maryland)
Greg Dusek
Haley Thiem
Hanna Goss
Hannah Bao
Holly White
Hunter Allen
International Arctic Research Center
Jake Crouch
Jane Palmer
Jared Rennie
Jasmine Blackwell
Jason Furtado
Jay Lawrimore
Jennifer Dorton
Jennifer Freeman
Jeremy Hoffman
Jess Whitehead
Jessica Blunden
Jessica Mkitarian
Jingru Sun
John Allen
John Callahan
John Dos Passos Coggin
John Marra
Jon Gottschalck
Julia Engdahl
Julie Leibach
Kai-Chih Tseng
Karen Holcomb
Karen Kavanaugh
Karin Gleason
Katherine Silverstein
Kathryn Hansen (NASA Earth Observatory)
Kathy Lynn
Katy Human
Katy Vincent
Ken Takahashi
Kim Cobb
Kitty Fahey
Kris Karnauskas
Laura Ciasto
Laura Newcomb
Linda Joy
LuAnn Dahlman
Margaret Walls
Maria-Jose Viñas
Mary Lindsey
Marybeth Arcodia
Mat Collins
Matthew Rosencrans
Maya V. Chung
Meagan Singer
Melissa DeFrancesco
Miakah Nix
Michael K. Tippett
Michael Kruk
Michael McPhaden
Michael Palecki
Michael Tippett
Michael W. Fincham
Michelle L'Heureux
Michelle L'Heureux and Brian Brettschneider
Michon Scott
Mike Carlowicz
Mike Halpert
Mike Squires
Monica Allen
Nat Johnson
Natalie Umphlett
Nathan Murry
National Climate Assessment
National Snow and Ice Data Center
National Weather Service
National Weather Service Alaska Region
Ned Gardiner
NOAA Climate Prediction Center
NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information
NOAA Science Council
Peg Van Patten
Phil Klotzbach
Rachel Brittin
Rebecca Lindsey
Rebecca Lindsey, with contributions from Nicole Collins
Ricardo Torrijo
Richard Allan
Rick Thoman
Roberto Molar-Candanosa
S.-Y. Simon Wang
Samantha Borisoff
Sang-Ki Lee
Sarah Kapnick
Shang-Ping Xie
Stephen Baxter
Sukyoung Lee
Susan Osborne
Theo Stein
Tim Briggs
Tim DelSole
Tim Woollings
Tom Di Liberto
Tom Knutson
U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit
Ulla Heede
Weston Anderson
William Sweet
Zack Guido
Zoe Hoyle
News & Research Highlights
Climate-related news and research highlights from NOAA and its partners
651-660 of 1453 results
Seafloor mapping data reveal large number of gas seeps off U. S. West Coast
May 4, 2021
Although the West Coast continental shelf has long been known to host methane bubble streams, scientists used to think those streams were rare. A new study in Frontiers of Earth Science suggests there are more than 1,300 emission sites between California and Canada.
NOAA blue carbon inventory project briefing sheet released
May 4, 2021
“Blue carbon” is carbon dioxide that the world’s ocean ecosystems remove from the atmosphere, through algae, mangroves, and other means. CPO has developed a briefing sheet for the newly launched NOAA Blue Carbon Inventory (BCI) Project you can review to learn more.
Climate Program Office and community scientists to map urban heat inequities in 11 states
May 4, 2021
Extreme heat kills more Americans than any other weather event, but not everyone’s risk is the same. Within the same city, some neighborhoods can be up to 20°F hotter than others. In the summer of 2021, community-led campaigns will map the hottest parts of cities in 11 states: Albuquerque, New Mexico; Atlanta; New York City; Charleston, South Carolina; Kansas City, Missouri; Raleigh and Durham, North Carolina; San Diego; San Francisco; and parts of New Jersey, Indiana, Massachusetts, and Virginia.
Drought task force shows progress in advancing drought monitoring and prediction in new special collection
May 4, 2021
In a special collection of the American Meteorological Society, 13 papers produced by researchers from the third NOAA Climate Program Office’s Modeling, Analysis, Predictions, and Projections (MAPP) program Drought Task Force (DTF3) describe research advances leading to improved monitoring, prediction, and understanding of past droughts.
Giant Australian bushfire injected 1 million tons of smoke into the atmosphere
May 4, 2021
New research on the massive Australian bushfires in 2019 and 2020 shows that almost 1 million metric tons of smoke rose into the stratosphere, causing it to warm by about 1 degree Celsius for six months, and likely contributed to the large and persistent ozone hole that formed over Antarctica during the Southern Hemisphere’s spring.
Five ways NOAA scientists are answering big questions about climate change
May 4, 2021
Tracking greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere, understanding ocean warming, exploring the link between climate change and hurricanes, tracking warming in the Great Lakes, and working towards climate resilience are just five examples of the many ways NOAA scientists are answering questions about climate change and its potential impacts on human societies.
'Average' Atlantic hurricane season to reflect more storms
April 13, 2021
As NOAA adopts 1991–2020 as the new 30-year period of record, “average” hurricane activity in the Atlantic Ocean will increase. Average activity for the new period of record means 14 named storms, 7 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes.
Tackling the challenges of a drier, hotter, more fire-prone future
April 13, 2021
With wildfires in the western United States burning nearly 3.56 million hectares (8.8 million acres) in 2020, or about 75% more area than expected in an average year, it’s important to know how droughts, wildfires, and heat waves interact. How do they shape each other’s likelihoods, magnitudes, and impacts?
Despite pandemic shutdowns, carbon dioxide and methane surged in 2020
April 7, 2021
Levels of the two most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide and methane, continued their unrelenting rise in 2020 despite the economic slowdown caused by the coronavirus pandemic .
...
Recording now available: Webinar about future flooding in the Pacific Northwest
April 6, 2021
Researchers with the Pacific Northwest Climate Impacts Research Consortium (CIRC) have projected widespread increases in flood magnitude throughout the Columbia River Basin in a warmer climate. By 2050, much of the Pacific Northwest could experience increased flood magnitudes. The webinar associated with this study, recorded March 5, 2021, is now available online.
Pagination
First page
« First
Previous page
‹ Previous
…
Page
62
Page
63
Page
64
Page
65
Current page
66
Page
67
Page
68
Page
69
Page
70
…
Next page
Next ›
Last page
Last »