Monday, May 20, 2024
The Polar vortex 'spinning backward' above the Arctic after a major reversal event triggers atmospheric upheaval, including an ozone spike, due to sudden stratospheric warming, impacting global weather patterns.
In a tweet, Brexit leader Nigel Farage warned his supporters that authoritarian measures by Western governments under the guise of climate lockdowns are coming. Brexit leader Nigel Farage has foretold of...
A sketch of a complex has revealed that Canada is planning to militarise its climate police force, and some believe these actions represent the beginnings of a pattern of attacks on farmers similar to those that sparked massive discontent in the Netherlands and other parts of Europe.
The catastrophic wildfires in Hawaii that may have taken the lives of many innocent people reportedly have a known cause. This finding challenges the climate change narrative often discussed by Democrats.
A report published by Switzerland’s IQAir has revealed that India is home to 39 of the world’s 50 most polluted cities.
Satellite readings from the University of Alabama in Huntsville that measure temperatures in the troposphere have shown no global warming for eight years and nine months, from July 2015 to March 2023.
An enormous carpet of seaweed stretching 5,000 miles (about 8,047 kilometres), about twice the width of the United States, is set to cause problems along the beaches of Florida and Mexico, as scientists become increasingly concerned about the algae's effects. According to a report in NBC News, the raft of brown seaweed in the Atlantic Ocean is so vast that it can be seen from space.
According to Science Alert, scientists have successfully reanimated the zombie virus after it was trapped in Siberian permafrost for 50,000 years.
Spain's "stonehenge" has become fully visible for the second time since water hid it in the 1960s thanks to a drought there. However, this is not the only recent discovery as ancient artifacts, dinosaur tracks and Nazi ships have all appeared around the world as drought causes low water levels.
A group of international scientists have come together to reject the idea of a climate crisis and argue that carbon dioxide (CO2) is actually good for the planet, going against the common alarming view.