WHOI in the News
Climate change ‘bait and switch’ threatens sharks and rays
How Neil Young’s “Shut it Down” stood up to climate change through rhetoric and melodic beats
Our “fingerprints” are all over climate change, research on warming ocean temperatures finds
Sea surface temperature research provides clear evidence of human-caused climate change
California’s historic storms continue. Here’s how much scientists say it’s being driven by climate change
The hidden, awful way that climate change imperils animals
Florida fishers faced Ian, fleeing shrimp, climate change effects
Cape Cod’s first climate change tour opens in Woods Hole
To slow climate change, some want to ‘engineer the ocean’
Climate change and El Niño battle it out this hurricane season
Climate change takes habitat from big fish, the ocean’s key predators
Climate change threatening shark habitats
Indisputable evidence of human-caused climate change
The Marine Lab in the Path of Climate Change’s Fury
Hub Spot’s Brian Halligan launches $100 million investment fund focused on climate change
Turning the tide against climate change
Warming Trends: Extracting Data From Pictures, Paying Attention to the ‘Twilight Zone,’ and Making Climate Change Movies With Edge
Robot designed by Texas university to explore underwater glacial walls to monitor climate change
What We Know About Oceans and Climate Change
On Cape Cod, the latest barrage of wind and waves, exacerbated by climate change, turns concern to desperation
Arctic researchers want to state their case before international climate change policy makers
With the Arctic region warming at three times the global rate, profound and rapid change is evident everywhere from the Greenland ice sheet to the ocean ecosystem and the permafrost underlying much of the landmass.
Symposium To Give Residents An Inside Look At Impacts Of Climate Change In Woods Hole
The upcoming symposium is the second in a multi-phased series and will build upon previous assessments of potential impacts of sea-level rise and coastal storms that were introduced during the September 2020 event “Rising Tides: Phase I.”
Can we harness the natural power of the ocean to fight climate change?
A top priority for science is to advance our understanding and monitoring of the oceans so that we can measure impacts and viability of these potential solutions. Specifically, this means developing more complete understanding of how the ocean works at this scale, how it cycles carbon from the surface to deep waters, and how the oceans are changing. With this new capability, we can test the effectiveness and impacts of these ocean CDR approaches.
A Recent Reversal Discovered in the Response of Greenland’s Ice Caps to Climate Change
New collaborative research from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and five partner institutions (University of Arizona, University of Washington, Pennsylvania State University, Desert Research Institute and University of Bergen), published on September 9, 2021, in Nature Geoscience, reveals that during past periods glaciers and ice caps in coastal west Greenland experienced climate conditions much different than the interior of Greenland.