The Arctic Ocean may see its first ice-free day by 2030, warns a new study. Climate change and greenhouse gas emissions are ...
From giant holes in Siberia to legions of beavers in Alaska, the Arctic is changing rapidly and accelerating the climate ...
A new study reveals that nearly all of the arctic sea ice could melt by the summer of 2027. Watch here to see why.
The Arctic is now a carbon source, instead of a carbon sink, according to a new report released by NOAA. Warming temperatures ...
Deep in the Canadian Arctic, scientists and entrepreneurs brave sub-zero temperatures, whipping winds and snowstorms to drill holes through the sea ice to pump out the seawater below and freeze it on ...
The Arctic's ice cover could dip below a crucial threshold as soon as 2027, and will do so inevitably in the next 20 years if ...
The Arctic experienced its second-hottest year on record, according to a NOAA report. The Arctic tundra has become a source ...
Earlier this year our international team of scientists from the Refuge Arctic consortium departed Iqaluit, Nvt. on a 56-day ...
Researchers have used computer models to forecast when the Arctic Ocean might experience its first ice-free day.
Rapid sea ice loss and ocean acidification from climate change are altering the growth and nutritional value of microscopic ...
Rising temperatures, increasing precipitation, thawing permafrost and melting ice are pushing the Arctic outside its ...
Arctic tundra is releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere as hotter temperatures melt frozen ground and wildfires ...