Africa's coastlines are under growing threat as sea levels climb faster than ever, driven by decades of global warming caused ...
Scientists now estimate that more than 200 million people could be living on land that will fall below future coastal high-tide lines, based on new elevation data published in Nature Communications.
Ocean Temperatures Broke Every Record Imaginable In 2025, the upper 2,000 meters of the ocean absorbed a record-setting 23 zettajoules more energy than in 2024, roughly 37 times as much as the world's ...
New Jersey is likely to see between 2.2 and 3.8 feet of sea-level rise by 2100 if the current level of global carbon emissions continue, but seas could rise by as much as 4.5 feet if ice-sheet melt ...
The fence around a "Building A Better Boston" project gets its feet wet as high tide during the snow storm floods across Long Wharf in 2020. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR) New research from the Woods Hole ...
If heat-trapping pollution from burning coal, oil and gas continues unchecked, thousands of hazardous sites across the United States risk being flooded from sea level rise by the turn of the century, ...
Sea-level rise has accelerated across Africa in recent decades, thanks to global warming and, in particular, to the melting of ice sheets and glaciers, according to a recent study. Sea levels across ...