After analyzing 385 studies related to coastal areas and sea level rise, scientists found a significant discrepancy between ...
AZ Animals US on MSN
This Tiny Florida Deer Lives Nowhere Else on Earth
When you think of Florida Keys wildlife, you probably think of sea turtles, dolphins, manatees, or colorful coral fish. Maybe ...
The new study described this "almost unprecedented rate of increase" in the length of an average day as a quantifiable ...
3don MSN
Climate change is slowing Earth's spin at unprecedented rate compared to past 3.6 million years
Climate change is lengthening our days because rising sea levels slow Earth's rotation. Researchers from the University of Vienna and ETH Zurich now show that the current increase in day length—1.33 ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Study: Up to 132M more people may face sea-level rise risk
A peer-reviewed study published in Nature on March 4, 2026, finds that up to 132 million more people worldwide may be exposed ...
A lot of past research has used flawed methodology to estimate current coastal water levels, according to a new study ...
Rising sea levels are slowing Earth’s rotation, lengthening how long an average day lasts. And the current rate of increase to a single average day—1.33 additional milliseconds per century—is ...
2don MSN
Length of days on Earth is increasing at an 'unprecedented' rate - and climate change is to blame
It might sometimes feel like the days are starting to drag on, but scientists say that this isn't necessarily all in your head.
But new research suggests a new player is making an impact: us. By studying foraminifera, tiny single-celled marine organisms that leave behind fossil shells, a team of researchers from the University ...
Sea level rise much worse than previously measured - raising fears of greater impacts from climate breakdown. The impacts from sea-level rise will happen sooner than projected before. Sea levels ...
Reaching net zero may not stop climate risks, a study finds rising seas and thawing permafrost could require carbon removal for centuries.
Scientists may have finally solved the mystery of strange plume-like structures hidden deep inside the Greenland ice sheet. New research suggests they form through thermal convection—slow, swirling ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results