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 ...
Many coastal maps start from the wrong sea-level baseline, and correcting the error could mean millions more are vulnerable ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Sea level is higher than we thought, putting millions more in extreme flood danger
A study published in Nature on March 4, 2026, found that more than 99% of coastal hazard assessments conducted over the past 16 years used flawed sea-level data, meaning actual ocean levels are ...
KOCHI: The possibility of parts of Kochi — including low-lying coastal stretches such as Vypeen and Chellanam — slipping below sea level by 2050 is emerging as ...
Sea levels along coasts around the world are much higher than assumed because of errors in the way they have been calculated, according to a study by Wageningen University and published in scientific ...
Parts of Essex, including Canvey Island and Tilbury, could face severe flooding by 2040 due to sea level rise, according to Climate Central’s ...
A new study in the journal Nature says most sea level rise research may have underestimated coastal water heights by an average of 1 foot or about 30 centimeters. The discrepancy stems from ...
The Outer Banks, a chain of narrow islands off the North Carolina coast, has seen sand erosion eat away at shorelines and now ...
Errors discovered in hundreds of sea level studies have changed coastal hazard maps around the world
Many of the world’s coastal risk maps begin with a simple assumption: the ocean starts at zero. But new research suggests that this baseline may already be wrong. Scientists analyzing hundreds of ...
A U.S. military refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq on Thursday, in an incident U.S. Central Command said involved another aircraft but was not the result of hostile or friendly fire. In a ...
Scientists discover underwater mountain ranges, golden towers of coral, and never-before-seen sea creatures.
Newsweek has mapped out the the five American lakes with the fastest-declining water levels.
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