News

Scientists are rethinking what we knew about a vanished ice sheet — and that could spell trouble for New York City.
Giant icebergs once scraped the seafloor near Britain, offering clues about ancient ice shelves and future sea-level rise.
Icebergs as large as cities, potentially tens of kilometres wide, once roved the coasts of the UK, according to scientists.
Researchers already knew this process occurred, but the revised model's implications are striking: Antarctica experienced "rapid and drastic" ice loss early in the Last Interglacial — outpacing ...
Despite being overlooked down at the South Pole, Antarctica actually plays a large role in our world and you would notice if ...
A reality is that the global warming that we humans are causing on our planet could have catastrophic consequences in the not ...
A new study reveals there was a time when massive icebergs, like the ones we see in Antarctica today, were drifting less than 90 miles off the U.K. coastline.
Over the past two decades, satellite-based planetary observations have recorded rapid mass loss of Patagonian glaciers, ...
The underbelly of massive "tabular" icebergs that dragged across the North Sea seabed between 18,000 and 20,000 years ago ...
Scientists have recently uncovered evidence of massive ancient icebergs that once drifted across the North Sea around 18,000 ...
The research, done by the universities of Exeter and Hamburg, analysed several tipping points, which includes the collapse of Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets and loss of mountain glaciers. The team ...