New research and federal monitoring efforts suggest the Atlantic’s great overturning circulation may be weakening more sharply than many models projected. The implications reach far beyond oceanography, touching coastal flooding, storms, fisheries, and the pace of climate disruption.
Author: Jaxson Reed
A New Forecasting Tool Out of Colorado State Is Changing How We Track Hurricanes
A Colorado State-led forecasting tool is helping meteorologists move beyond the familiar hurricane cone and toward storm-specific uncertainty. By blending machine learning with operational forecasting, it could change how officials communicate risk before landfall.
How Climate Change Is Shaping Winter Snowfall
Explore the emerging trends in winter precipitation, how a warming climate is altering snowfall patterns, and what it means for water resources.
What a Cold Front Means for Your Weekend Plans
A quick guide to interpreting cold‑front weather maps, expected precipitation, and safety tips for outdoor activities.
7 Warning Signs That a Thunderstorm Is About to Hit
Nature whispers before it roars—dark skies, sudden chills, and silent animals all signal a storm’s story before the first drop falls.
Why Climate Change Is Driving More Intense and Frequent Storms
Climate change is causing storms to become more frequent and intense, with far-reaching effects on communities worldwide.