Earth experienced its hottest year on record, surpassing previous highs with an average temperature 1.28 degrees Celsius ...
An image released by NASA illustrates record global temperatures in 2024 as the average went up by 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit (1.28 degrees Celsius).
Sanne Cottaar is Professor of Global Seismology in Earth Sciences. She wants to understand Earth’s inner structure: how it ...
A massive and evolving weak spot in Earth’s magnetic field, known as the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA), has caught the ...
In addition to the Ocean CSI data, the online tool also provides maps for sea surface temperatures and temperature anomalies ... the vast majority of the Earth’s excess warming (more than ...
New research reveals the Arctic is changing fast as permafrost regions are warming, forests are stressed, and flooding is ...
The third Starship test flight last March saw the spacecraft reach its planned trajectory and fly halfway around the world ...
Global temperatures in 2024 were 2.30 degrees Fahrenheit ( 1.28 degrees Celsius) above the agency's 20th-century baseline ...
The Earth's mantle isn't just a hot, dense layer of rock; it's a dynamic and diverse engine driving our planet's geology.
Surface ocean ... One of the causes of such anomalies in fishing grounds is “ocean heat waves,” a statistically rare phenomenon in which high sea water temperatures persist for more than ...
Unprecedented temperature highs made 2024 the warmest year on record worldwide, according to leading climate organizations.
These timeseries include ocean surface temperatures only and do not include any land surface temperatures. SST timeseries are presented as anomalies or departures ... the same as those used to provide ...