Greenland losing ice faster this century than any previous one in last 12,000 years, says study
Researchers say findings reaffirm need for humans to curb greenhouse gas emissions Humans have to slow down greenhouse gas emissions
Read moreResearchers say findings reaffirm need for humans to curb greenhouse gas emissions Humans have to slow down greenhouse gas emissions
Read moreA major number of sediment samples have been collected from the Arctic seabed in the course of the maiden voyage
Read moreRepresentatives of the First Nation of Na-Cho Nyäk Dun and Ottawa’s Carleton University signed a memorandum of understanding to work together
Read moreAn international science expedition reached the North Pole on Wednesday after project leaders noticed shrinking sea-ice conditions and “surprisingly loose”
Read moreOne week after the death of Konrad Steffen, a Swiss/U.S. dual citizen, while doing field work in Greenland, friends and
Read moreA longtime resident of Watson Lake, Yukon, has contributed to the world of science — simply by taking a picture. This
Read moreThe third Arctic Science Ministerial, scheduled to take place this November, has now been moved to 2021 because of the
Read moreThe Pacific and Atlantic Oceans are driving changes in Arctic waters in more complex ways than previously recorded and are
Read moreThe World Meteorological Organization (WMO) says annual mean global temperatures are likely to be a minimum of 1 C above
Read moreThe World Meteorological Organization (WMO) is working to confirm a record-breaking 38 degree C temperature reported in the Russian Arctic
Read moreChelsea Rochman wasn’t surprised when her research cruise through Canada’s Eastern Arctic showed tiny plastic shards and other human debris
Read moreWhile ways of reindeer husbandry may be adaptable to the changing climate, intergenerational transmission of Indigenous knowledge can be negatively
Read moreIt was February 11 and professor Valery Mitko was at sleep when the doorbell began to rang at seven o’clock
Read moreOne of the most prolific dinosaurs known lived some 70 million years ago between Alberta and Colorado. It also called Alaska’s
Read moreThey prepared for icy cold and trained to be on the watch for polar bears, but a pandemic just wasn’t
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