The records that were broken were another reminder of how vast and interconnected the Earth is as climate change effects pile up.
Author: Joel Shannon, USA TODAY
Elon Musk says he’s temporarily capping how many tweets you can read. What we know.
Twitter owner Elon Musk on Saturday set “temporary limits” on how many tweets users can read. Now some Twitter are getting ‘rate limit exceeded’ errors.
Climate change protesters target famous sculpture at National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC
Photos show activists on Thursday smeared red and black paint on a Plexiglas enclosure that housed the sculpture.
The Northern Lights dazzled huge swath of US overnight. Here’s where and when to see them.
National Weather Service offices in Montana, Wyoming, Minnesota, Wisconsin, the Dakotas, and New York reported seeing the aurora borealis.
‘It could happen tomorrow’: Experts know disaster upon disaster looms for West Coast
The West Coast could at any moment face disasters that could kill thousands of people and forever change the lives of millions more, experts say.
Is climate change the same thing as global warming? Definitions explained.
What to know about climate change and global warming. As climate disasters mount, scientists say causes are clear and solutions are possible.
At least 149 dead in South Korea after crowd surge during Halloween festivities, officials say
The deaths and injuries occurred after a large crowd pushed forward on a narrow street during Halloween festivities in Seoul, officials said.
Oceans rise, houses fall: The California beach dream home is turning into a nightmare
Along California’s coast, homes costing millions of dollars teeter on the edge of cliffs as plans for what to do next face delays.
‘Earthquake swarm’ in South Carolina: State shook by 2 of its strongest quakes in years Wednesday
South Carolina was rocked by several earthquakes Wednesday, including the two strongest quakes yet in a “swarm” of earthquakes.
‘We do not want to be involved’: As horror unfolds in Ukraine, most of the world isn’t punishing Putin
Leaders representing most of the world’s population are choosing not to punish Russia for its atrocities, according to a USA TODAY analysis.