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U.N. review shows the world is falling short of climate goals, signs of progress

When this year's United Nations Climate Change Conference begins in late November 2023, it will be a moment for course correction.

Canada
Ukraine
Paris
France-general
France
India
Germany
Nairobi
Nairobi-area
Kenya
Senegal
Indonesia

Atlantic sargassum belt carrying massive seaweed toward Florida, Caribbean

An unwelcome visitor is headed for Florida and the Caribbean: huge floating mats of sargassum, or free-floating brown seaweed.

Florida
United-states
Sargasso-sea
Oceans-general
Oceans
Fort-lauderdale
Bermuda
Brazil
Miami
Gulf-of-mexico
American
Brazilian

Thick sea ice accelerates warming in Greenland's fjords, study says

Plastic particles proliferate globally, spread by ocean waves and through the air

Think 2020 was bad? Historians say 536 was worst year ever to be alive

Think 2020 was bad? Historians say 536 was worst year ever to be alive By (0) A partial solar eclipse is viewed from Europe on March 20, 2015, via the European Space Agency s sun-watching Proba-2 satellite. File Photo courtesy European Space Agency April 12 You wake up to a dark, dreary, glum-feeling, Monday-type of morning. For the 547th consecutive day. Just 18 months prior, you were a hard-working farmer gearing up for another bountiful crop season. But then the skies went dark. From early 536 to 537, they stayed dark. Advertisement Across much of eastern Europe and throughout Asia, spring turned into summer and fall gave way to winter without a day of sunshine. Like a blackout curtain over the sun, millions of people across the world s most populated countries squinted through dim conditions, breathing in chokingly thick air and losing nearly every crop they were relying on to harvest.

Iceland
New-york
United-states
Greenland
El-salvador
China
California
University-of-maine
Maine
Guatemala
San-francisco
Ilopango

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