1. Climate variation, change, or both?

    Burning fossil fuels has led to a warmer, moister atmosphere and a shifting background for extreme weather and climate events, according to a study that analyzes noteworthy weather events from the last two years.

    • Climate

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  2. Motel damage in Salyersville, KY

    Twisters and teleconnections

    Why would a cooling of the Pacific Ocean help stoke tornadoes in the United States? Researchers are beginning to dig deeper into the connections between severe U.S. thunderstorms and the sea.

    • Climate,
    • Weather

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  3. Japanese cherry tree blossoms, Tidal Basin, Washington, DC

    Out of sync

    Days lengthen as spring arrives, but several other signs of the season are showing up earlier and earlier. Some animals and insects aren’t adapting fast enough to this "asynchrony," and there's an increasing disconnect with legal dates that govern hunting and other resource management.

    • Climate

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  4. Winter scene from Sawhill Ponds, Boulder County, Colorado

    Whither our winters?

    The winter of 2011–12 was the second in a row to feature La Niña, the quasi-cyclic cooling of the eastern tropical Pacific—but the two seasons departed from the La Niña script in strikingly different ways.

    • Climate,
    • Weather

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  5. Hot summers increasing in the U.S.

    A new study finds that extremely warm summers are not only occurring more frequently in the contiguous United States, but are likely to become normal by mid-century.

    • Climate

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