climate change
How an Ancient Comet Collision Could Have Caused Global Warming 56 Million Years Ago
A team of scientists has identified the first-ever evidence of a comet colliding with planet Earth about 56 millions of years ago, suggesting that the catastrophic event could have lead to an abrupt warming period or Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) on Earth.
Latest Research Articles
Uranium-dating Through Deep Sea Corals Deposits a Useful Reference on Northern Glacial Retreat
Human-Induced Climate Change to Blame for the Increasing Forest Fire in the US
U.S. Southwest At Risk of Decades-Long ‘Megadroughts’ Due to Climate Change
Most Physicians Worldwide Agree Climate Change Negatively Affects Patient Health
New Climate Model Reveals Methane Did Not Warm Ancient Earth
Leonardo DiCaprio's Documentary 'Before the Flood' Discusses Climate Change
Good News: Paris Agreement on Climate Change Will Soon Take Effect With EU's Ratification
Scientists Discover Strange Disruption in One of Earth’s Most Predictable Climate Patterns
Consequences of Climate Change: Insects at Glacier National Park Now at Risk
ALERT: Shorter Sea Ice Season in Arctic Could Endanger 19 Polar Bear Populations
Earth's Carbon Dioxide Levels Just Passed a Threshold Irrevocably
Manmade Water Reservoirs Contribute to Global Warming, Produce More Greenhouse Gases than Canada




