Preparing your home for extreme weather is crucial for safeguarding your property and ensuring the safety of its occupants. As climate change continues to increase the frequency and severity of ...
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) - Night number one of two for severe weather across America. Wildfires with dust on the Plains and in the foothills of the Rockies to go with severe thunderstorms armed ...
Many are warning that slashing its workforce could compromise the quality and accuracy of extreme weather forecasts that guide government responses to hurricanes, wildfires, tornadoes, floods and ...
Extreme weather events are no longer rare occurrences but have become a part of our daily lives. From devastating hurricanes ...
Extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and intense, posing significant challenges to urban areas worldwide. Cities ...
Editor's note: Follow USA TODAY's live coverage of Saturday's severe weather and tornados. A powerful March storm is sweeping across the nation, unleashing a dangerous severe weather outbreak in ...
Eileen Falkenberg-Hull leads the Autos team at Newsweek. She has written extensively about the auto industry for U.S. News & World Report, CarGurus, Trucks.com, AutomotiveMap, and American City ...
Europe’s eastern frontier is feeling the full brunt of a warming world. From rivers bursting their banks to fields withering in record heat, emerging Europe stands on the climate front line—and must ...
Parts of Pennsylvania, New York and mid-Atlantic and southeast US states were still under weather alerts for damaging wind and tornadoes, as the death toll from weekend storms rose to 36 across ...
In January, a cascading series of weather disasters led to historic Los Angeles wildfires that killed 29. Texas — the U.S. epicenter of extreme weather — has been hit by a string of compound ...
There are concerns extreme weather events and a reported increase in vandalism are putting the trees at risk, more than 200 years after they were first planted on the mainland. Griffith University ...
History could help inform us, and the National Weather Service has a handy chart for it. The chart provides a historic look at temperatures and rainfall in New Orleans for Feb. 26-March 4.