A current system in the Atlantic Ocean that's crucial for regulating the world's weather and ecosystems might be more stable ...
"We gain a clearer understanding of how these dynamics have varied over millennia and what this means for our current climate ...
A new study suggests the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation has not weakened since the 1960s — but there's no doubt ...
Satellites have managed to detect faint electromagnetic signals generated by ocean tides, suggesting that space-born sensors ...
Renowned climate scientist Professor James Hansen has warned that current warming targets are "dead" and the UK could be ...
Severe weather awareness is not all about lightning, floods, tornadoes and hurricanes. The number one weather killer in ...
How fast the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide — and with it, the temperature — goes up matters for the ability of humans ...
Rising mountain peaks and sharp rock formations cover the ocean floor, with corals, sponges, fish, and tons of sea creatures clinging to their sides. Unlike mountains on land that dare climbers ...
In the Atlantic Ocean, a system of connected currents, called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), moves water throughout the world's oceans powered by a combination of winds ...
In the movie “The Day After Tomorrow,” the Atlantic Ocean’s main current system is disrupted and sets off a chain of disastrous events from monster storms to an Ice Age across the northern ...