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Sea Level RiseArctic & AntarcticClear All
PodcastJune 16, 2021

E2: TIL about sea level rise, part 1

TILclimate Podcast
PostMay 14, 2021

MITx Course Materials: The History of Ancient Environments, Climate, and Li...

MIT Open Learning
PostApril 28, 2021

Cave deposits show surprising shift in permafrost over the last 400,000 yea...

MIT News
Earth’s permafrost shifted to a more stable state in the last 400,000 years and has been less susceptible to thawing since then, according to a new study by MIT researchers and their colleagues, who are pictured here on a research expedition.
PostApril 23, 2021

Navigating beneath the Arctic ice

MIT News
PostFebruary 22, 2021

EAPS Professor Susan Solomon helped set the Doomsday Clock

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
PostFebruary 16, 2021

Glaciologist Brent Minchew contributes to new Arctic exhibit at Museum of S...

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
PostDecember 15, 2020

MIT oceanographers have an explanation for the Arctic’s puzzling ocean tu...

MIT News
MIT oceanographers have proposed an explanation for the Arctic’s puzzling ocean turbulence.
PostOctober 1, 2020

Antarctic sea ice may not cap carbon emissions as much as previously though...

MIT News
The prevailing theory has been that sea ice can act as a lid to keep carbon in the ocean from escaping back to the atmosphere. However, researchers at MIT have now identified a counteracting effect that suggests Antarctic sea ice may not be as powerful a control on the global carbon cycle as scientists had suspected.
PostSeptember 3, 2020

“The Emerald Tutu” wins NSF grant for design to protect Boston’s coas...

MIT News
Aerial view photo montage of the Emerald Tutu in Boston Harbor, here shown flanking and protecting the waterfront areas of East Boston.
PostJune 17, 2020

Ice, ice, maybe

MIT News
EAPS graduate student Meghana Ranganathan studies glaciers to better calibrate climate models.

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