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Drake Passage: The 'most dreaded bit of ocean on the globe' — where waves reach up to 80 feet
By Sascha Pare published
The Drake Passage off the West Antarctic Peninsula is a notoriously dangerous channel that connects the Atlantic, Pacific and Southern oceans.

Chinese scientists use laser drones to count the country's trees — all 142.6 billion of them
By Sascha Pare published
Researchers have counted the number of trees in China and mapped their distribution across the country using a laser-based technique called lidar.

30,000-year-old fossilized vulture feathers 'nothing like what we usually see' preserved in volcanic ash
By Jess Thomson published
Fossilized vulture feathers that were stunningly preserved in volcanic ash were a mystery until now.

'Heat is the final boss. Heat is a different beast': The planetary peril no one will be able to avoid
By Jakob Thomä published
"What will be new about heat deaths is the extent to which the lived environment will become physically uninhabitable for everyone, old and young, middle-aged, healthy and ill."

Scientists create new map showing ice-free Antarctica in more detail than ever before
By Sascha Pare published
Bedmap3 is the most fine-grain map to date of the landscape beneath Antarctica's ice. Scientists created it using more than 60 years' worth of data from satellites, ships and dog-drawn sleds.

Alaskan volcano Mount Spurr showing activity that will 'most likely end in an explosive eruption,' scientist says
By Stephanie Pappas published
Mount Spurr near Anchorage has been showing signs of unrest for a year. Now scientists think it's creeping closer to an eruption.

'We don't have a climate crisis — we are the crisis': Environmentalist Paul Hawken on why honoring life is the best thing we can do against climate change
By Sascha Pare published
Environmentalist and author Paul Hawken speaks to Live Science about the worldview that has led to the mindless exploitation of the planet — and how we can shift perspectives for a better future.

1st glacier declared dead from climate change seen in before and after images
By Harry Baker published
Earth from space Satellite images taken more than three decades apart show the disappearance of Iceland's Okjökull, the first glacier to be officially declared dead as a result of human-caused climate change.
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