Chris Hayes talks to his panel about global warming deniers and the season we call “winter.”
Chris Hayes talks to his panel about global warming deniers and the season we call “winter.”
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- Responding to the impact that a growing population and changing land use have had on the Chesapeake and Delaware Bays over the past 60 years is the focus of a research project led by Penn State and supported by a $1.4 million grant from NASA.
Penn State's Water Polo team will be featured on ABC's World News with Diane Sawyer. Allison Lederer (senior Meteorology) and THON fundraising chair will be interviewed
Are you naturally curious about how the world works? Interested in helping people or creating things no one has ever dreamed of? If you answered yes, you might be interested in a career in the field of science, technology, engineering or math (STEM).
If it seemed like summer never came this year, it wasn’t your imagination.
The parallels between the political decisions regarding climate change we have made and the decisions that led Europe to World War One are striking – and sobering.
Climate change scientist Michael Mann discusses the most significant findings in the second installment of the IPCC report, and how the media amplifies minority voices who hold contrarian positions in order discredit the report's conclusions - April 1, 14
Forecasters would love to predict violent weather with more accuracy and longer lead times. Researchers are helping them by unraveling the science behind the complex sequence of events that lead to tornadoes.
While the Penn State Arboretum will always be a place for plant lovers, it may find a new following among weather wonks.
For centuries we have marveled at the diversity of snowflakes and told our children that each snowflake is unique (just like our little darlings!)