News

A new study reveals that uneven land subsidence could impact 29,000 buildings across the America's most populated metropolises.
The movement is slow — sinking on the scale of millimeters per year in the United States — but the effects accumulate over ...
As NASA reveals sea levels rose at a fasster rate than expected in 2024, chilling maps reveal which states in the US could be ...
New data shows land is sinking in all major U.S. cities, with Houston hit hardest, and climate change and urban growth could ...
Read about the difference between the two programs offered in the Field of Geography, BA and B.Sc. Along with the eligibility ...
ANALYSIS: Human presence in high-altitude open areas during the Ice Age is not just a possibility, but a reality, Marta ...
Local businesses that rely on the tourist traffic to Mount Rainier National Park during the summer say they’re paying the ...
Fast warming in the Arctic - now running at roughly four times the global average - is reshaping landscapes, affecting shrubs ...
Published today in Current Biology, a new study shows that the Yangtze finless porpoise has lost over 65% of its historic ...