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.
Researchers found that a majority of studies on coastal sea levels underestimated how high water levels are, and hundreds of millions of people are closer to peril than previously thought.
Greenland’s fishermen are struggling as warming weather from climate change makes the sea ice unreliable and the fish harder to predict.
Sea levels across the world are already “much higher” than most scientific assessments have assumed, according to new research, making coasts even more vulnerable to rising oceans as a result of ...
Humans are a coastal species. More than one in ten people in the world live within three miles of the shore, and about 40 ...
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has warned that the currently active weak La Nina condition may transition into ...
A widely used method to calculate sea level rise may have missed up to a century of change, so the risks could hit home for millions sooner than thought.
Most coastal risk assessments have underestimated current sea levels, meaning tens of millions of people face losing their homes to rising waters earlier than expected ...
Global coastal sea levels are on average 1 foot higher than previously assumed, a new report finds, raising alarms the world is underestimating how much land and how many people will be affected by ...
Traditional ice fishermen who make up half the local industry are seeing the most dramatic changes to the way they fish ...
"It's like the balloon that's not punctured everywhere, but where it is punctured, it's punctured deep." ...
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