Articles for tag: Climate Change, environmental history, Green Sahara, Sahara Desert

brown sand and green grass during daytime

The Sahara Desert Was Once a Lush Paradise: Uncovering Its Green Past

Suhail Ahmed

  Today the Sahara stretches across North Africa like a vast, sun-baked ocean of sand, but the latest science tells a very different story about its past. Beneath those dunes lie the fingerprints of rivers, lakes, and thriving ecosystems that once supported hippos, crocodiles, and human communities. For decades, scattered fossils and rock art hinted ...

Least Flycatcher

Earlier Migration in Tiny Birds: A Signal of Climate-Induced Challenges

April Joy Jovita

The least flycatcher (Empidonax minimus), a small North American bird, is facing mounting challenges as climate change alters its migration patterns. Recent studies reveal that these birds are migrating earlier in the fall, a shift that could have profound implications for their survival and the ecosystems they inhabit. The Shift in Migration Patterns Over the ...

brown deer beside plants

10 Surprising Ways Climate Change Impacts US Wildlife

Suhail Ahmed

  Across the United States, animals are quietly rewriting the rules of survival as the climate warms, storms intensify, and seasons slip out of sync. Biologists tracking everything from backyard birds to deep-sea corals are watching a slow-motion upheaval that rarely makes headlines but is already reshaping ecosystems. The story is not just about polar ...

The Climate Accountability Era Begins: New Study Traces $28 Trillion in Damages

Jan Otte

In a breakthrough moment for global climate justice, a landmark report has put numbers on the extraordinary cost imposed on our planet by the world’s biggest companies. Scientists at Dartmouth College mapped out $28 trillion of climate damages back to the emissions of 111 specific companies, leaving the door open for a new age of ...

Climate Change and Its Impact on Sacred Sites in Oceania

Climate Change and Its Impact on Sacred Sites in Oceania

Annette Uy

The turquoise waves of the Pacific, dotted with emerald islands, hold secrets older than memory itself. For generations, the people of Oceania have turned to sacred sites—places of worship, burial, and spiritual gathering—as cornerstones of culture and identity. But today, these irreplaceable locations stand on the frontlines of a battle with climate change. Rising seas, ...

Ice Age: woolly mammoth

The Mysteries of Extinct Megafauna: Lessons from the Ice Age

April Joy Jovita

The Ice Age was a period of remarkable biodiversity, marked by the presence of majestic megafauna like the woolly mammoth, saber-toothed tiger, and giant ground sloth. However, these creatures vanished thousands of years ago, leaving scientists to unravel the reasons behind their extinction. Was it climate change, human intervention, or a combination of both? Recent ...

arctic ice melt

Climate Crisis Accelerates: Arctic’s Ice-Free Day Looms Ahead

April Joy Jovita

Recent studies predict that the Arctic could experience its first ice-free day within the next three years, a milestone that underscores the urgency of climate action. Researchers from multiple institutions warn that the accelerating loss of sea ice will have catastrophic consequences for global climate stability. Why Arctic is Losing Ice Faster than Expected Historically, ...

7 Signs the Planet's Weather Is Entering a New Age

7 Signs the Planet’s Weather Is Entering a New Age

Gargi Chakravorty

The Earth’s climate system is shifting into uncharted territory. You’ve likely noticed the headlines about record temperatures and extreme storms, but what’s happening now goes far beyond isolated weather events. Scientists worldwide are documenting fundamental changes that signal we’re witnessing the emergence of a dramatically different climate era. When you examine the data from 2024, ...