Climate ChangeA scientific look at global change.
|
|
|
By Jon Erdman
May 18, 2013 Spring warmth has arrived in most of the U.S., except this state.
|
|
By Michael D. Lemonick
May 16, 2013 Thousands of small glaciers, unconnected to continental-scale ice sheets, have dumped about 260 million tons of meltwater into the ocean annually between 2003 and 2009.
|
|
By Angela Fritz
May 16, 2013 The scientific agreement that climate change is happening, and that it's caused by human activity, is significant and growing, according to a new study published Thursday.
|
| Temperature | Precipitation | Snowfall* | ||||||
|
Study: 97% Agreement on Manmade Global Warming
By:
Dr. Jeff Masters
Published: Tháng năm 16, 2013 The scientific agreement that climate change is happening, and that it's caused by human activity, is significant and growing, according to a new study published Thursday. The research, which is the most comprehensive analysis of climate research to date, found that 97.1% of the studies published between 1991 to 2011 that expressed a position on manmade climate change agreed that it was happening, and that it was due to human activity.
|
|
Magical Mystery Tour: Unicorns, Yeti and the Loch Ness Monster
By:
Dr. Ricky Rood
Published: Tháng năm 16, 2013 This blog will focus on three stories in the press in the past few months that have been flaring up. They have been smoldering for years and I expect they will smolder for a few more years.
|
|
How Much Does It Cost: What Can I Do? (6)
By:
Dr. Ricky Rood
Published: Tháng năm 9, 2013 My original list topper on diet was eat less meat. If we take the high emissions scenario as correct, then a climate priority calls for an intervention into our dietary practices that is comparable to the intervention required for reducing fossil fuels. This is a change in diet that I assert will be more difficult than the change in our energy system. Therefore, back to the original question, “What can I do about climate change?” – eat (a lot) less meat. Vegetarianism is good for the planet.
|
t was an unusually cool April over much of the U.S. during April 2013. It was the coolest April since 1997, and ranked as the 23rd coolest April in the 119-year record for the contiguous U.S., putting the month in the coldest 20% of all Aprils on record. North Dakota had its coldest April on record, and six additional states--South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Minnesota, and Wisconsin--had top-ten coldest Aprils on record. No state recorded a top-ten warmest April.