This past week, from March 13 through 19, has been one for the record books. Northeast Ohio saw an improbable number of extreme weather and natural phenomena seemingly at once.
Several of the Earth’s systems are changing faster than predicted as global temperatures rise, scientists say.
A massive Western heat wave and a potential El Niño event raise concerns about a long stretch of unpredictable and extreme weather.
On Thursday, March 12, a cold front hit the Mid-Atlantic region that made the temperature plummet as much as 50 degrees in some places.
Dire social media warnings about record-breaking heat and extreme weather conditions this year may be drawing widespread attention, but experts have said that it is too early to predict if a super El ...
A long-duration heat wave is taking shape over the western half of the U.S. and forecast to stick around in the days ahead.
While March is normally a volatile month for weather across the U.S., this month seems to be especially off the rails, ...
The Guardian shared the results of a Climate Matters analysis, which revealed that winters in 80% of major U.S. cities are now an average of nine days shorter than they were from 1970 to 1997.
It is still too early to determine whether a super El Nino — a natural climate phenomenon marked by warmer-than-average sea ...
Storms across the nation's eastern half forced airlines to cancel roughly 4,000 flights nationwide. Blizzards buried parts of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, rains flooded homes in Hawaii, and ...
Nearly every part of the United States is getting walloped by wild weather or just about to be. Here in the D.C. region, record-breaking high temperatures were snuffed by snowfall Thursday.