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Sørvágsvatn: The lake that 'floats' above the ocean thanks to a unique optical illusion
By Sascha Pare published
Sørvágsvatn, also called Leitisvatn, is the largest lake in the Faroe Islands. Viewed from a certain angle, one side appears to hover above the Atlantic Ocean.

'Blackwater' lakes and rivers in the Congo Basin are now emitting ancient carbon into the atmosphere
By Sascha Pare published
Carbon that has been buried in the Congo Basin's peatlands for millennia is seeping into lakes and rivers. Why this is happening remains unclear, but researchers warn that tropical peatlands could be nearing a tipping point.

Early warning indicator hidden within the Gulf Stream could signal the collapse of key Atlantic currents, study finds
By Sascha Pare published
Shifts in the Gulf Stream could help researchers predict the human-driven failure of a huge system of ocean currents known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation.

The world is being held hostage by its reliance on oil. How can we break free from the fossil fuel?
By Hannah Osborne published
Like whale blubber, oil as a dominant source of energy will gradually be phased out over the next decades. Here's what that transition may look like.

Gemstone-filled river and striped mountain ridge form massive 'Y' in China's revitalized desert
By Harry Baker published
Earth from space A 2025 satellite photo shows a giant "Y" in the middle of the Taklamakan Desert, where a verdant river and a lengthy "red-white mountain" meet. The intersecting features are also home to an eighth-century fort that was chock-full of ancient artifacts.

California's wildfire season is shifting, with more blazes after the traditional high-risk window, study finds
By Stephanie Pappas published
New research finds that climate-driven shifts in wildfire seasons in North America are different depending on the ecosystem.

'The warming trend nearly doubled after 2014': The rate of global warming has accelerated more in the past decade than ever before
By Pragathi Ravi published
A new analysis finds that global warming has significantly accelerated since 2015, but not everyone agrees.

Planting trees in the sea could act as a huge carbon sink and save millions of dollars in storm damage every year. What is stopping us from doing it?
By Sarah Wild published
A new study reveals restoring mangroves could save $800 million in storm damage, protect 140,000 people from flooding, and remove almost triple the amount of CO2 produced by cars in the U.S. every year.

'Humans can't be considered to be separate from the environment': Award-winning scientist Meha Jain on using satellites and real world experiences to help farmers in India facing a precarious future
By Pragathi Ravi published
INTERVIEW Agriculture in India is under threat from extreme weather events linked to climate change. We speak to Meha Jain, an associate professor of geospatial data sciences, food systems at the University of Michigan, who has spent nearly 20 years working with farmers in India to understand the threats they are facing and how they are adapting.
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