Researchers found that a majority of studies on coastal sea levels underestimated how high water levels are, and hundreds of millions of people are closer to peril than previously thought.
Humans are a coastal species. More than one in ten people in the world live within three miles of the shore, and about 40 ...
Global coastal sea levels are on average 1 foot higher than previously assumed, a new report finds, raising alarms the world ...
Most coastal risk assessments have underestimated current sea levels, meaning tens of millions of people face losing their homes to rising waters earlier than expected ...
I didn’t expect the discrepancy to be so immense,” said Katharina Seeger, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of ...
I didn’t expect the discrepancy to be so immense,” said Katharina Seeger, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Padova ...
Oceans are rising as the climate changes, threatening coastal cities. A new study shows that much more of the world's ...
Using a more accurate coastal height baseline means that a 3-foot rise in seas could inundate up to 37% more land and ...
Climate change's rising seas may threaten tens of millions more people than scientists and government planners originally ...
A new study highlights a 'methodological blind spot' in the way sea level rise is measured. View on euronews ...
A new 30-year analysis reveals that melting land ice is now the main force behind rising global sea levels. Researchers discovered that oceans rose about 90 millimeters since 1993, with most of the ...