Eruptions of subglacial volcanoes may not be visible on the surface, but they can have consequences for the ice sheet. Heat ...
New processing strategies applied to old seismic data reveal potential pockets of magmatic fluids or melts from the upper ...
Earthquake early warning systems are rarely accessible to people who are deaf or hard of hearing. A group of scientists is ...
In the decade since the start of the Flint water crisis, policymakers and communities have made improvements to the lives of ...
The summer of 1969 was approaching, and Priscilla Nelson, a self-proclaimed “hippie chick,” had a muddy decision to make: attend Woodstock or go to geology field camp. In the end, she chose ...
Antarctica is losing ice quickly, in part because of climate change. Massive calving events, such as the one that formed the Delaware-sized (5,800 square kilometers, or 2,239 square miles) A-68 ...
A fleet of spacecraft captured unprecedented details of the major solar outbursts in May and June 2024.
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For the 11th year in a row, the Arctic warmed more drastically than the rest of the world, a change that continues to bring cascading consequences to Arctic systems, wildlife, and residents.
The first analysis of extreme calving events in Antarctica finds no correlation with climate change, highlighting the significance of common, smaller calving events for ice loss and instability.