People living in snowy regions that are being transformed by global heating are experiencing ecological grief and anxiety. But could these feelings spur climate action?
The retreat of glaciers in the Pacific mountains of British Columbia and Alaska could produce thousands of kilometres of potential new salmon habitat, a study led by researchers at Simon Fraser University shows.
South Island glaciers were roughly stable in the years 1949 to 1955 but then shrank from 1956 to 1980, according to a new study by New Zealanders who contributed to the global warming science that won a Nobel Peace Prize.