The ambitious effort to document California’s changing deserts.
Jason Ogulnik for Nature
Jim and Carol Patton hunt for kangaroo rats and other desert rodents in Death Valley, California.
Jim Patton brushes a packrat’s furry...
'Katrina brain': The invisible long-term toll of megastorms.
NEW ORLEANS — Brandi Wagner thought she had survived Hurricane Katrina. She hung tough while the storm’s 170-mph winds pummeled her home, and powered...
Hurricane Maria: Three weeks after landfall, Puerto Rico is still dark, dry, frustrated.
By Manuel Roig-Franzia and Arelis R. Hernández,
Gerald Herbert AP
YABUCOA, Puerto Rico — Late each night, Rafael Surillo Ruiz, the mayor of a town with...
Climate change did not cause Syrian war.
Drought brought on by climate change is not responsible for the Syrian war, scientists say, but it has helped to make conflict likelier.
LONDON, 11...
Everyone knew Houston’s reservoirs would flood — except for the people who bought homes...
Barker Dam and Reservoir in Houston on Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017 (Michael Stravato/The Texas Tribune)
by Neena Satija, The Texas Tribune and Reveal, Kiah Collier,...
Another victim of Hurricane Maria: Puerto Rico's treasured rainforest.
By LUIS FERRÉ-SADURNÍOctober 11, 2017LUQUILLO, P.R. — When you looked up, you could once see nothing but the lush, emerald canopy of tabonuco and sierra palm...
Whitehouse's floor soliloquies chug on. Is anyone listening?
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island is one of the most outspoken Democrats on climate action. Arianna Skibell/E&E News
For the 180th time, Sheldon Whitehouse...
The Napa fire is a perfectly normal apocalypse.
Blame the wind, if you want. In Southern California they call it the Santa Ana; in the north, the Diablos. Every autumn, from 4,000...
Amid wreckage of hurricane-devastated Caribbean, leaders see a climate change opening.
In the ruins of his hurricane-ravaged nation, Dominica Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit sees the homes that have to be razed, the hospital and clinics...
The real work begins after the disaster has come and gone.
The 15-minute news cycle has created a strange kind of public amnesia. As soon as a disaster is declared “over,” we forget it and...













