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Climate Change

Young people from Amazonian communities march during the Pan-Amazon Social Forum in Rurrenabaque, Bolivia on June 12. Credit: Katie Surma/Inside Climate News

To Save the Amazon, What if We Listened to Those Living Within It?

By Katie Surma

A woman gets water from a fountain in Manhattan as a heat wave blankets New York City on June 21. Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

How To Survive a Heat Wave on a Fixed Income

By Gautama Mehta, Grist

Midwest Floods, Widespread Heat Waves Are Undermining U.S. Transportation Systems

By Kiley Price

New research showing previously unmapped areas of meltwater on the surface Antarctic ice shelves raises concerns about the large-scale disintegration of those floating shelves. Credit: Sergio Pitamitz/VW Pics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Study Maps Giant Slush Zones as New Threat to Antarctic Ice

By Bob Berwyn

Kids Are Particularly Vulnerable to Extreme Weather. What Are We Doing About It?

By Kiley Price

Van Cortlandt Park Alliance employees and volunteers work to remove water chestnuts from the Bronx park during “water chestnut Wednesday.” Credit: Lauren Dalban/Inside Climate News

New York’s Chronically Underfunded Parks Department Is Losing the Fight Against Invasive Species, Disrepair and Climate Change

By Lauren Dalban

Some streams and rivers in Alaska’s remote Brooks Mountain Range are turning orange. Researchers think melting permafrost may be the culprit. Credit: Josh Koch/USGS

Q&A: What’s in the Water of Alaska’s Rusting Rivers, and What’s Climate Change Got to Do With it?

Interview by Jenni Doering, Living on Earth

Why is Rhino Poaching Down at This Park? The Reasons May Not Be Good

By Kiley Price

States Are Scrambling to Prepare As a Prolonged Heat Wave Spreads in the Midwest and Northeast

By Kiley Price

Synchronous fireflies in a meadow at the 2021 Pennsylvania Firefly Festival. Credit: Peggy Butler

Will the Lightning Bug Show Go On?

By Kiley Bense

Steel pipe sections of the Mountain Valley Pipeline during construction in Bent Mountain, Virginia, in August 2022. The pipeline became operational on Friday. Credit: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

A ‘Rights of Nature’ Tribunal Puts the Mountain Valley Pipeline on Trial

By Hannah Chanatry

Kenny Moll (front, blue shorts) and Michael-Luca Natt (front, black shorts) finish their sixth marathon in the same amount of days to raise awareness for the impacts of climate change. Credit: Keerti Gopal/Inside Climate News

Outrunning the Heat? This Climate Activist is Running Seven Marathons in Seven Days

By Kiley Price

Cemeteries Can Be Damaged by Climate Change—and Provide Climate Refuge

By Kiley Price

Two Masked Boobies that died along the beach of Bedout Island are seen in July 2023, three months after Cyclone Ilsa. Credit: Andrew Fidler/Adrift Lab

Intensifying Tropical Storms Threaten Seabirds, New Research Shows

By Bob Berwyn

A view of Lake Palcacocha, a glacier lake in the Peruvian Andes near Huaraz on May 23, 2022. Credit: Angela Ponce/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Glaciers in Peru’s Central Andes Might Be Gone by 2050s, Study Says

By Alexa Robles-Gil

Michael and Mindy McClung said they regret building a home in Marion County with the hope that public water would soon be installed. Well over a decade later, they're still waiting. Credit: Lee Hedgepeth/Inside Climate News

Where the Water Doesn’t Flow: Thousands Across Alabama Live Without Access to Public Water

By Lee Hedgepeth

A field of coconut trees cling to life as desertification advances around them in Icó-Mandantes, Brazil. Credit: Arnaldo Sete/MZ Conteúdo.

In Brazil’s Semi-Arid Region, Small Farmers Work Exhausted Lands, Hoping a New Government Will Revive the War on Desertification

Story by Giovanna Carneiro and Inácio França, Marco Zero Conteúdo

Volunteers distribute cold drinks at a heat wave relief camp on May 31 in Lahore, Pakistan. Credit: Arif Ali/AFP via Getty Images

Q&A: As Temperatures in Pakistan Top 120 Degrees, There’s Nowhere to Run

Interview by Steve Curwood, Living on Earth

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