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On 28 November 1966, an American airplane flies over the Antarctic Peninsula just south of the southernmost tip of Chile. On ...
Communities adapt to rising seas 08:34. Our sea levels will remain elevated for thousands of years. Scientists around the world agreed on that in last week's U.N. report about climate change ...
But accelerated sea-level rise isn’t just a beachfront problem. From threatened heritage to salty forests, oyster farms and inland flooding, voices across the region show this threat and its ...
Two images taken almost a century apart at Fort Denison in Sydney, Australia are being held up on social media as evidence that sea levels are not increasing -- contrary to what available science has ...
Ancient coral fossils from the remote Seychelles islands have unveiled a dramatic warning for our future—sea levels can rise ...
The graphic, made by Andrew J. Christensen, a data visualizer for the NASA Scientific Visualization Studio, shows how much the sea level has risen in the 30 years between 1993 and 2022.
California's beaches are world famous. But new research indicates many could disappear by the century's end due to erosion from sea level rise. "The shoreline, where the water meets the sand right ...
Sea level rise is expected to worsen coastal flooding -- even on sunny days, according to new NOAA report. Rain won't be the only factor to cause severe floods in coastal communities.
On July 12, a Facebook user shared another meme featuring two pictures of Plymouth Rock side by side, one labeled “1620 at sea level” and the other “2022 still at sea level.” (Screenshot ...
The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are on course for rapid retreat, even collapse, leading to multiple feet of sea level rise even if the world pulls off the miraculous and keeps global ...
Climate researchers thought that current global average sea levels were the highest in more than 100,000 years, but new models suggest oceans just 6000 years ago may have been higher than at the ...
Throughout the world, sea level rise threatens millions of homes and businesses. But in Atlantic City, the water is rising much faster than the rest of the world.
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