Every hurricane in the Atlantic was made more intense, part of a growing trend for Earth’s most powerful storms, two new ...
A new study says human-caused climate change made Atlantic hurricanes about 18 mph stronger in the last six years.
For three storms, including this month's Rafael, the climate change factor goosed wind speed so much that the winds increased ...
Climate change has driven hurricane wind speeds up by an average of nearly 30 kilometres per hour, an analysis of Atlantic ...
Every single Atlantic hurricane in 2024 had wind speeds supercharged by warming seas. One even jumped two categories of intensity.
A new analysis finds that the storms’ wind speeds increased by up to 28 miles per hour, boosting their destructive power.
Hurricane Rafael has pushed into the Gulf of Mexico after plowing across western Cuba as a Category 3 hurricane with winds so ...
External cameras aboard the International Space Station captured views of Hurricane Milton over the Gulf of Mexico. Credit: Space.com | footage courtesy: NASA | edited by Steve Spaleta ...
Climate change strengthened the maximum wind speeds of Atlantic hurricanes by an average of 18 mph during the past five years ...
Rafael had maximum sustained winds of 105 mph Wednesday as it made landfall in the western Cuban province of Artemisa. It ...
Five of the growth trends in this report fit ... “I see a beautiful trend towards gathering family together for mutual support.” Hurricanes, floods, wildfires and other disasters are helping ...
Hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean Basin are running on average a category stronger on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale ...