Arctic tundra, a frozen treeless biome which has stored carbon for thousands of years, has now become a source of heat-trapping greenhouse gases (GHGs) which are the primary drivers of global warming, ...
If you've been looking for a universal remote to control your TV, these are the best options out there. Ty Pendlebury has worked at CNET since 2006. He lives in New York City where he writes about ...
Aside from a new package, revised pricing and some updated equipment, the 2025 Toyota Tundra continues ... standard niceties like keyless entry, push-button start, a remote tailgate, automatic ...
Green summer tundra and the rolling Mulgrave Hills in northwestern Alaska’s Cape Krusenstern National Monument are seen on July 11, 2011. The Mulgrave Hills are the farthest west extension of ...
For thousands of years, the Arctic tundra landscape of shrubs and permafrost, or frozen ground, has acted as a carbon dioxide sink, meaning that the landscape was taking up and storing this gas that ...
For millennia, the Arctic tundra has helped stabilize global temperatures by storing carbon in the frozen ground. Wildfires have changed that, according to the latest Arctic Report Card released ...
A focus of the latest Arctic evaluation was the effects of warmer weather and wildfires on the tundra, a far-northern biome that's typically known for extreme cold, little precipitation and a ...
Prior to Vox, he was a reporter for ClimateWire at E&E News. The frigid Arctic tundra has soaked up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere for millennia, an essential balancer for our planet’s climate.
Arctic tundra, which has stored carbon for thousands of years, has now become a source of planet-warming pollution. As wildfires increase and hotter temperatures melt long-frozen ground ...
Google Wallet on Wear OS recently gained support for mobile credentials. The wearable app now has its first provider to deliver support for the feature. This feature allows a user to unlock ...
But as fossil fuel emissions heat the planet, balmier air temperatures are thawing Arctic tundra, activating carbon-hungry microbes, and more vegetation is being burned up by wildfires.