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21 votes
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Berkeley Earth June 2023 temperature update
7 votes -
Saguaro cacti collapsing in Arizona extreme heat, scientist says
17 votes -
'Could be a world record': South Florida ocean temperature hits 101.1°F
21 votes -
A volcanic eruption near Litli-Hrútur in south-western Iceland saw fissures open up in the Earth – and the creation of a new baby volcano
11 votes -
US workers are dying in heat wave but Joe Biden administration is still working on federal standards for working in extreme heat
29 votes -
Sick of hearing about record heat? Scientists say those numbers paint the story of a warming world.
19 votes -
How California’s weather catastrophe turned into a miracle
20 votes -
How climate change could cause a home insurance meltdown
30 votes -
How an era of extreme heat is reshaping economies
11 votes -
Analysis: Pollution time bombs — Contaminated wetlands are ticking towards peat ignition
13 votes -
Expanding heat wave prompts alerts for 115 million people in the United States
59 votes -
Why do cloud providers keep building datacenters in America's hottest city?
33 votes -
Soaring temperatures and raging fires: Europe faces its second heat wave in a week
21 votes -
California may be underutilizing its smokejumpers claims veteran firefighter
5 votes -
Smoke clouds and lava as volcano erupts near Icelandic capital – eruption near Reykjavík follows week of small earthquakes in area
20 votes -
‘We are not prepared’: Disasters spread as climate change strikes
25 votes -
Analysis rate of sea level rise and flood risk
5 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 -
Heat waves expose electric car batteries to risk of damage
14 votes -
‘An insane amount of water’: What climate change means for California’s biggest dairy district
14 votes -
Canadian smoke reaches Europe - NASA Terra satellite
16 votes -
2,200 earthquakes have been recorded in the area around Iceland's capital Reykjavík, signaling that a volcanic eruption could be imminent
27 votes -
Solar power proves its worth as heat wave grips Texas
15 votes -
Wildfires and California: A discussion of mitigation efforts, government policy, insurance and more
13 votes -
A Tesla owner says he was locked out of his EV after its 12-volt battery died amid the Texas heat
38 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 -
‘Extreme threat’: Large swathe of southern US at dangerous ‘wet bulb temperature’
26 votes -
4.6 magnitude earthquake near Rawson, Victoria, Australia
12 votes -
Renewables are the only reason Texas' power grid hasn't failed during this month's punishing heat wave
19 votes -
It’s Canada’s worst fire season in modern history, as smoke fills skies
44 votes -
Heat and smoke are smothering most of the US, putting lives at risk
14 votes -
Somalia faces worst drought in decades, leading to record number of displacements
Somalia faces worst drought in decades, leading to record number of displacements — Toronto Star Somalia is facing the worst drought in four decades, devastating floods and more than 30 years of...
Somalia faces worst drought in decades, leading to record number of displacements — Toronto Star
Somalia is facing the worst drought in four decades, devastating floods and more than 30 years of conflict, leading to a record number of displacements this year, with more than a million people fleeing their homes in just 130 days. This brings the total number of internally displaced people to nearly four million, which is close to a quarter of the country’s population. In desperation, some mothers are poisoning their babies with detergent and salty water to trigger illnesses and thus receive free food from health centers. This food, instead of being given to the sick child, is sold to provide for the whole family. Source
17 votes -
Has anyone else gone down the weather rabbit hole recently?
I was always familiar with tornadoes living close to or in Oklahoma for a vast majority of my life. However, with the odd weather patterns we’re seeing this year producing severe weather, I’ve...
I was always familiar with tornadoes living close to or in Oklahoma for a vast majority of my life. However, with the odd weather patterns we’re seeing this year producing severe weather, I’ve gone way down the rabbit hole. Watching weather livestreams, subscribing to chasers, the works. Has anyone else been on the bandwagon?
20 votes -
I'm using the Kīlauea Volcano eruption as a fun background replacement
8 votes -
Smoke from Canadian wildfires engulfs East Coast, upending daily life
39 votes -
At the University of California San Diego, there's the Shake Table; an earthquake simulator with the heaviest payload capacity in the world
8 votes -
Tulare lake is re-emerging in California, and farms and communities are going underwater
7 votes -
In 1952, a landslide caused a tsunami that killed a Greenlandic man – some researchers think he might have been an early victim of anthropogenic warming
2 votes -
Twitter restricted in Turkey in aftermath of earthquake
8 votes -
A Dutch researcher named Frank Hoogerbeets had predicted the Turkey earthquake two days before it had happened
Dude actually made this tweet on 3rd February, two days before the dreaded quake hit Turkey: Sooner or later there will be a ~M 7.5 #earthquake in this region (South-Central Turkey, Jordan, Syria,...
Dude actually made this tweet on 3rd February, two days before the dreaded quake hit Turkey:
Sooner or later there will be a ~M 7.5 #earthquake in this region (South-Central Turkey, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon). #deprem
What's interesting about this researcher is that he doesn't study earthquakes through the traditional or established way of Seismology. Instead, his institute, SSGEOS specializes in "monitoring geometry between celestial bodies related to seismic activity". It's incredible how little we know about the world we live in and how much more there is to know yet.
5 votes -
California fires back at other Western states with its own Colorado River plan
9 votes -
New Zealand: Airport flooded and homes swamped in Auckland
5 votes -
Arizona city cuts off a neighborhood’s water supply amid drought
16 votes -
Bomb cyclone hits California with flooding, high winds and heavy snow
9 votes -
Disaster scenarios raise the stakes for Colorado River negotiations
6 votes -
Indonesia evacuates villagers as volcano erupts on Java island
3 votes