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Mongabay News on MSNClimate futures: What’s ahead for our world beyond 1.5°C of warming?This story is the first article of a two-part Mongabay mini-series exploring possible climate futures. Read Part One.
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The Daily Galaxy on MSNExperts Predicts Unrecognizable Changes to Earth’s MapA new study warns that the planet’s climate zones could undergo dramatic shifts within the next 77 years. As global ...
Countries agreed to return for the next round of climate talks in November 2022 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, with stronger commitments to put the world on track for 1.5°C.
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The Print on MSNWhere no humanoid has gone before: Italian scientists develop world’s first flying robotScientiFix, our weekly feature, offers you a summary of the top global science stories of the week, with links to their ...
It follows searing temperatures at the end of last month, when the mercury climbed to 40.7C at the airports of Córdoba and ...
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Asianet Newsable on MSNCan trees save the climate? Not with misleading maps, experts warnNew global maps reveal that realistic reforestation opportunities are 71-92% smaller than previously believed. By fixing data ...
Several of Mount Rainier’s glaciers are already gone, experts say, and others aren’t far behind. The News Tribune asked what that means for visitors.
Alaska, Hawaii and areas along the mainland West Coast would be at risk if an earthquake erupts along the Cascadia subduction zone within the next 50 years.
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Study Finds on MSNEarth’s Oceans Are Growing Darker, And It’s Creating A Crisis For Marine LifeAn area of underwater real estate has significantly darkened, squeezing 90% of marine life into an ever-shrinking zone near ...
Already, warming momentarily breached 1.5 ... climate effects that are both dire and, perhaps more importantly, irreversible. The WMO report reaffirms that the world has entered that danger zone ...
For the Indigenous Gayo, Alas, Kluet, Aneuk Jamee, and Karo peoples, Leuser is not merely a forest—it is sacred ancestral land. Their stewardship has kept the ecosystem intact for centuries. But in ...
Almost 400 scientists from around the world came together to understand the movements of large marine mammals, using 30 years of satellite tracking data.
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