Information about past outlier conditions could provide valuable context to help operators better manage the grid during extreme weather.
Researchers track the movement of charred detritus dispersed from Goleta Beach in the wake of the 2018 Montecito debris flow
In recent years, the plumes of smoke crawling upward from Western wildfires have trended taller, with more smoke and aerosols lofted up where they can spread farther and impact air quality over a wider area.
Sea ice and wildfires may be more interconnected than previously thought, according to new research out today in Science Advances.
Exposure to extreme heat increases both chronic and acute malnutrition among infants and young children in low-income countries – threatening to reverse decades of progress, Cornell research finds.
When a severe summer drought hit Europe in 2018, the impact on food systems was immediate.
Professors say it is a sign of more to come as climate change continues to create extreme weather challenges.
New research refining the amount of sunlight absorbed by black carbon in smoke from wildfires will help clear up a longtime weak spot in Earth system models, enabling more accurate forecasting of global climate change.
With nearly a third of the U.S. facing excessive heat warnings and the U.K. coming off of a stretch of record high temperatures, weather is dominating headlines around the world.
With heatwaves and triple-digit air temperatures afflicting much of the United States, there is at least one place that is colder than normal: Lake Superior.
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