Hydroclimate whiplash -- the rapid shift between wet and dry conditions -- likely contributed to the severity of the ...
Hydroclimate whiplash -- rapid swings between intensely wet and dangerously dry weather -- has already increased globally due to climate change, with further large increases expected as warming ...
As Los Angeles continues to battle devastating wildfires, attention is turning to why they started, and how much climate ...
A series of savage lurches from intensely dry to fiercely wet conditions helped fuel the horrific winter fires we're ...
This week, researchers at the Desert Research Institute reported that lead pollution likely caused widespread IQ declines in ...
October to April is normally considered to be the wet season in California, yet this January, the region is experiencing some ...
As California oscillates between drought and deluge, wildfires rage due to "hydroclimate whiplash" driven by global warming.
Climate change is causing more rapid swings between intensely wet and dangerously dry weather, leading to droughts, flooding ...
A study published Thursday has put the blame for the wildfires ravaging parts of Los Angeles on an emerging climate ...
In early July 2021, the Oregon Bootleg wildfire was considered seasonally abnormal, taking place slightly earlier than a ...
FOX 13 Meteorologist Dave Osterberg explains how wildfires like the deadly ones burning in California can grow so quickly.
The “expanding atmospheric sponge,” or the atmosphere's ability to evaporate, absorb and release 7% more water for every ...