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Climate News at MIT

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PodcastDecember 15, 2022

E7: TIL about winter storms

TILclimate Podcast
Educator GuideDecember 14, 2022

Winter Storms and Climate Change Educator Guide

TILclimate Podcast
People near a train or bus in a city, with snowflakes.
PostJune 1, 2022

Cracking the case of Arctic sea ice breakup

MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Lincoln Laboratory’s Ben Evans (left) and Dave Whelihan deployed this spool — featuring 230 feet of polymer fiber with embedded temperature and depth sensors — in the Arctic.
PostApril 21, 2022

Given what we know, how do we live now?

MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Circular ripples in a pond
PostApril 7, 2022

Q&A: Climate Grand Challenges finalists on using data and science to foreca...

MIT News
PostMarch 10, 2022

Study: Ice flow is more sensitive to stress than previously thought

MIT News
The rate of glacier ice flow is more sensitive to stress than previously calculated, according to a new study by MIT researchers that upends a decades’ old equation used to describe ice flow. Pictured is the Juneau ice field in Alaska.
PostJanuary 20, 2022

The radical intervention that might save the “doomsday” glacier

MIT Technology Review
Glacier breaking off into ocean
PostJanuary 4, 2022

Four winners announced for the 2019-2020 and 2020-2021 Rossby Awards

MIT Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences
An aerial view of the MIT campus, which includes the Green Building
PostDecember 15, 2021

The Atlantic’s vital currents could collapse. Scientists are racing to un...

MIT Technology Review
Researchers from NOAA and University of Miami use the F.G. Walton Smith, a 96-foot vessel, for quarterly voyages to take current readings in the Florida Straits.
PostSeptember 29, 2021

The language of change

MIT News
Philosophy matters to Conti not only because he is interested in ethics, but because he believes that philosophy of language, which can illuminate how humans communicate, will help him advance convincing arguments on behalf of good climate policy.

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