Por: ABC News World November 10, 2022
As scientists anticipate another unintended consequence of climate change that could pose a threat to both humans and wildlife, they are finding ways to use technology to combat those threats.Global warming continues to trigger the mass melting of Arctic sea ice, causing polar bears to begin gravitating toward land, scientists from told ABC News. Sometimes, the closest land just happens to be populated by people, increasing the likelihood of... + full article
Forbes USA Life October 27, 2022
Manitoba, Canadagetty Way beyond the snaggle of office buildings and hi-rise condos, which are braided together with honking traffic, big construction projects, and crowds, a different sort of beating heart endures—a bold and more contemplative one. In the far reaches of... + más
Man slaps bear to protect family in heart-pounding video | Newsweek
Good Samaritan's over $1,000 gift to stranger stuns internet | Newsweek
New York Post USA Life October 23, 2022
The leaps across the water, landing on an ice sheet with a semi-belly flop. That’s one of the sights tourist Emma Postolec caught during an Arctic cruise on Sept. 27. Her videos showed the polar bear, the largest carnivore species on the planet, acting as playfully as... + más
The climate crisis in the polar regions doesn’t stay in the polar regions | The Boston Globe
Russia's climate is heating up faster than the rest of the world | Newsweek
Newsweek USA Nation October 13, 2022
Online commenters have praised a man who purportedly paid a stranger's outstanding utility bill of over $1,000.The man's colleague—an anonymous social media user posting under the name Polar Nerd—shared the story in a now-viral Twitter thread, writing: I'm... + más
Franklin Graham traveling to southwest Florida to help victims of Hurricane Ian | Fox News
State, local officials weigh future of devastated Kissimmee retirement community | Orlando Sentinel
The Boston Globe USA Opinion October 12, 2022
In 2005, I stood in front of the Lilliehook Glacier in Svalbard Bay, in the Svalbard archipelago in the Arctic Ocean; the same location my great-great-grandfather explored 100 years prior. The integrity of glaciers and ice caps I observed, compared to his photographs, presented... + más
World Bank fight against poverty fails to address climate impact, critics say | ABC News
Newsweek USA World October 11, 2022
Russia is experiencing a rise in temperatures at a faster rate than the world as a whole, Russian climate scientists said.It is well known that global temperatures are increasing due to climate change, with the rate of warming rising as time goes on. Earth's temperature has... + más
Your Home Heating Costs Are Going to Go Up This Winter—a Lot | Time
Our View: Heating prices leave Mainers anxious as winter approaches | Portland Press Herald
The Boston Globe USA Nation September 26, 2022
The story of the black bear that is coming to a suburb near you begins one day in the fall of 1969, when two bears showed up along a road in the northern Berkshires, in the tiny town of Florida, and appeared to be drunk.Back then, black bears were barely hanging on in... + más
12 eye-catching numbers as the Chicago Bears prepare to face the Houston Texans in Week 3 | Chicago Tribune
Will the Chicago Bears leave Soldier Field for Arlington Heights? Here’s what to know. | Chicago Tribune
Time USA Science September 24, 2022
Zombie ice from the massive Greenland ice sheet will eventually raise global sea level by at least 10 inches (27 centimeters) on its own, according to a study released Monday. Zombie or doomed ice is ice that is still attached to thicker areas of ice, but is no longer getting... + más
A 400-year-old shark? Greenland shark could be Earth's longest-lived vertebrate | Los Angeles Times
Untouched whale graveyard captured in eerie photo: You're all alone | Newsweek
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