Rain gauges did not exist millions of years ago. Instead, researchers turn to indirect clues left behind in rocks, soils, and ...
To understand how global warming could influence future climate, scientists look to the Paleogene Period that began 66 million years ago, covering a time when Earth's atmospheric carbon dioxide levels ...
La Niña—a climate phenomenon characterized by unusually cool sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean—can persist for multiple years, exerting significant climate ...
New research shows how changing rainfall speeds up soil carbon loss and how biochar helps soil cope with stress.
The soil is still so saturated from all this rain,” says National Weather Service meteorologist Rich Thompson.
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