News

A new study from the U.S. Geological Survey finds that groundwater in Appalachia, the Gulf Coast, and California is ...
A wider swath of the Lone Star State may be affected by more heat and flood events than previous recordkeeping suggests.
A new study from the U.S. Geological Survey finds that groundwater in Appalachia, the Gulf Coast, and California is susceptible to contamination from orphaned oil and gas wells.
Climate change–accelerated seaweed growth could cause seaweed-dependent microbes to proliferate and consume more oxygen, ...
GRIT provides a much more detailed look at how rivers merge and split, which could enhance hydrological modeling, flood ...
New research on the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum used probabilistic analysis to learn more about its duration and how ...
Miles away from the ocean, projects are afoot to clean up salty groundwater and use it to grow crops. Some say it’s a costly ...
It’s usually cooler under a forest than outside the forest, but that natural temperature buffering didn’t make global warming any less strong during the last 45 years in an old-growth forest of Oregon ...
The Landslide Blog is written by Dave Petley, who is widely recognized as a world leader in the study and management of landslides. Over the course of my career, I have read many papers (and ...
Data dashboards assist in understanding a community’s vulnerability to climate impacts, but input from the communities ...
The complexity of modeling the tropical Atlantic makes identifying the source of the ongoing seaweed blooms difficult.