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5 votes
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Camp Century - The hidden city beneath the ice
9 votes -
When Greenland was green: Ancient soil from beneath a mile of ice offers warnings for the future
16 votes -
Even if the planet doesn't get any warmer than it is now, melting ice in Greenland could add at least 1.5 metres to the global average sea level
33 votes -
The coolest library on Earth: At the University of Copenhagen, researchers store ice cores that hold the keys to Earth’s climate past and future
15 votes -
The heat-resistant organism in antler coral may help it adapt as ocean temperatures increase
4 votes -
Mining is getting a makeover. The industry believes that in order to be successful — and maximize profits — a company now needs a “social license to operate,” or moral permission to extract minerals.
6 votes -
Why do cloud providers keep building datacenters in America's hottest city?
33 votes -
Scientists at Purdue have created a white paint that, when applied, can reduce the surface temperature on a roof and cool the building beneath it
56 votes -
Making infrared cooling paint from grocery store items
9 votes -
‘We are not prepared’: Disasters spread as climate change strikes
25 votes -
How coral reefs can survive climate change
8 votes -
Analysis rate of sea level rise and flood risk
5 votes -
On being a c̵o̵m̵p̵u̵t̵e̵r̵ ̵s̵c̵i̵e̵n̵t̵i̵s̵t̵ human being in the time of collapse
12 votes -
Warmer, drier weather because of El Niño is expected to hamper rice production across Asia, hitting global food security in a world still reeling from the impacts of the war in Ukraine
17 votes -
In the US, as the planet records some of its highest average temperatures, workers have barely any legal protections from extreme heat
17 votes -
Climate change has caused and will cause big problems for Iraq
11 votes -
Weather extremes are thrashing the world, and it’s just a taste of what’s to come
15 votes -
EU passes nature restoration law in knife-edge vote
19 votes -
Can probiotics protect corals from problems like bleaching?
8 votes -
The ground is deforming, and buildings aren't ready. First study to quantify effects of subsurface climate change on civil infrastructure
23 votes -
‘An insane amount of water’: What climate change means for California’s biggest dairy district
14 votes -
How Tabasco fills up to 700,000 hot sauce bottles a day | Big Business
25 votes -
Meltwater is hydro-fracking Greenland's ice sheet through millions of hairline cracks – destabilizing its internal structure
10 votes -
More than 1,500 US fossil fuel lobbyists serve as “double agents”
23 votes -
Wildfires and California: A discussion of mitigation efforts, government policy, insurance and more
13 votes -
Smoke will keep pouring into the US as long as fires are burning in Canada. Here’s why they aren’t being put out.
25 votes -
The catastrophe no one talks about
4 votes -
‘Extreme threat’: Large swathe of southern US at dangerous ‘wet bulb temperature’
26 votes -
Renewables are the only reason Texas' power grid hasn't failed during this month's punishing heat wave
19 votes -
Humans have used enough groundwater to shift Earth’s tilt
9 votes -
Denmark sets new record - month of June has been the most sunny since records began
11 votes -
No, climate activists are not coming for New York City pizza
16 votes -
Home weather stations - what's the weather like where you are?
I've been idly browsing for a home weather station for a while, hoping to contribute to the local sensor network for a region that's got lots of microclimate variation. I saw this one from Seeed...
I've been idly browsing for a home weather station for a while, hoping to contribute to the local sensor network for a region that's got lots of microclimate variation. I saw this one from Seeed Studio today, and was hoping for some reviews and advice. Seeed Studio devices are known for open source software, and I wouldn't mind playing with writing a tie-in for sprinkler system automation so we're not irrigating when it's about to rain. It wouldn't be situated so far from the house that we'd need to use the LoRaWAN feature, though.
Concurrently, we just had an inch of rain dropped on our house in the space of 15 minutes, with winds that were taking down tree branches. The weather report says "light rain", weather stations a mile away continue to indicate that everything is bone dry with quiet air. This rainstorm breaks a nearly month-long drought. I'm finding it nerve-wracking that climate change makes it impossible to use past local weather as a predictor of what to expect for gardening, home maintenance, and outdoor activities, and local weather reports are so inaccurate. So that's (hopefully) where the weather station might come into play.
That being said, any chat about your local conditions and reporting from your station is welcome.
21 votes -
World Meteorological Organization says Europe is the fastest warming continent in the world
11 votes -
Rampant groundwater pumping has changed the tilt of Earth’s axis
34 votes -
The first chapter of The Ministry for the Future
12 votes -
Landmark ‘kids’ climate trial begins: how science will take the stand
13 votes -
‘Don’t Look Up’ director Adam McKay wants to win the climate information war — with memes
16 votes -
Geoengineering is shockingly inexpensive
15 votes -
Three more glaciers gone from Mount Rainier, scientist reports
35 votes -
Greta Thunberg: ‘School strike week 251. Today, I graduate from school, which means I'll no longer be able to school strike for the climate’
21 votes -
Inside Big Beef’s climate messaging machine: Confuse, defend and downplay
8 votes -
We’re about to kill a massive, accidental experiment in reducing global warming (2018)
15 votes -
Amazon employees stage walkout over return-to-office mandate, climate goals, and layoffs
11 votes -
Denmark is getting off fossil fuels. Are there lessons for Canada?
5 votes -
Norway under pressure to scale back fossil fuel expansion plans – campaigners say development of huge Rosebank field in North Sea would drive climate breakdown
2 votes -
Daily tides stoked with increasingly warmer water ate a huge hole at the bottom of one of Greenland's major glaciers in the last couple of years
4 votes -
There is no climate tipping point
6 votes -
Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are now losing more than three times as much ice a year as they were thirty years ago
8 votes