Over the next decade, rising oceans are poised to redraw the edges of some of the world’s best known coastal cities, turning ...
Many states in the United States would be significantly impacted if sea levels rose 10 feet, including Texas, a projection ...
NASA’s Sea Level Change Team has created a sea level projection tool that makes extensive data on future sea level rise from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) easily accessible to ...
Featuring four new localities, the updated report cards show past and projected rates of sea level rise and acceleration for 36 U.S. coastal communities in a new, interactive dashboard. This year, the ...
More than 30 years of satellite measurements confirm that global sea-level projections made in the mid-1990s closely match what has actually occurred, according to Tulane University researchers whose ...
South Florida’s future is looking soggy. A map from the nonprofit group Climate Central is making the digital rounds, laying out the stark reality that rising sea levels and flooding can make annual ...
Note: This transcript was computer generated and edited by a volunteer. Dave Miller: We turn now to another recent map put out by NOAA, another way to see how climate change is affecting our lives.
Global sea-level change has now been measured by satellites for more than 30 years, and a comparison with climate projections from the mid-1990s shows that they were remarkably accurate, according to ...
An interdisciplinary team of researchers has projected that if the rate of global CO2 emissions continues to increase and reaches a high emission scenario, sea levels would as a result very likely ...
A 10-foot sea level rise would leave a significant number of U.S. coastal cities "uninhabitable," J. Derek Loftis told Newsweek.
This sea level rise "would severely disrupt the essential facilities that communities depend on," Shangjia Dong told Newsweek ...