When Mount St. Helens erupted in 1980, lava incinerated anything living for miles around.
articles
Climate Change Parching the American West Even Without Rainfall Deficits
Higher temperatures caused by anthropogenic climate change made an ordinary drought into an exceptional drought that parched the American West from 2020–2022.
New PFAS Removal Process Aims to Stamp Out Pollution Ahead of Semiconductor Industry Growth
A University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign study is the first to describe an electrochemical strategy to capture, concentrate and destroy mixtures of diverse chemicals known as PFAS — including the increasingly prevalent ultra-short-chain PFAS — from water in a single process.
Microplastics Impact Cloud Formation, Likely Affecting Weather and Climate
Scientists have spotted microplastics, tiny pieces of plastic smaller than 5 millimeters, in some of the most pristine environments on Earth, from the depths of the Mariana Trench to the snow on Mt. Everest to the mountaintop clouds of China and Japan.
Could Crowdsourcing Hold the Key to Early Wildfire Detection?
The 2023 blaze in Lahaina, Hawaii, which claimed more than 100 lives and burned 6,500 acres of land across Maui, is a tragic example of how rapid wildfire spread can make effective response efforts impossible, resulting in the loss of life and property.
Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki Spews Ash
In early November 2024, a series of explosive, deadly eruptions occurred at Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki—a volcano on the Indonesian island of Flores.