By: Yildiz Subuk, Staff Writer We are all susceptible to the volatility of the climate. January 7 marked the beginning of one of the most devastating wildfires that would eventually grow and ...
Two new studies have shown how climate change can increase disease. Both of these reports were focused on the increase in cases of coccidioidomycosis... | Microbiology ...
On Friday, the storied coastal road had dissolved into a river of mud and debris after a powerful rainstorm sent those burned ...
The following is an excerpt from a recent article on the Weather West Blog.  California's extraordinary precipitation dipole has persisted into mid-Feb with only slight attenuation Well, it has ...
It seems like merely a fact of life on the West Coast that summers are dry. But compared to most of the rest of the country ...
Moisture sweeping down the coast will drench much of California, including areas that burned severely just a month ago.
Nick O'Malley is National Environment and Climate Editor for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. He is also a senior writer and a former US correspondent.
This dramatic speed-up of the water cycle is creating a phenomenon called hydroclimate whiplash where conditions jerk rapidly from extremely wet to extremely dry and back again.
This dramatic speed-up of the water cycle is creating a phenomenon called hydroclimate whiplash where conditions jerk rapidly from extremely wet to extremely dry and back again. In 2022, Handwerger ...
The Los Angeles fires, at least in part, are a product of this sort of “hydroclimate whiplash.” In 2023 and 2024, the city experienced unusually wet winters, which spurred the growth of ...
But to Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at U.C.L.A. and author of the Weather West blog, one significant factor already seems clear: "hydroclimate whiplash." The phenomenon is characterized by a very ...