While it's been unusually cold and snowy in much of Europe, the Arctic has been seeing record warm temperatures and a huge loss of ice. Here's how the two are linked, and what they might have to do with climate change.
You never know what’s going to wash up on the beaches of Cornwall, England. In recent years, among the seaweed and driftwood, mysterious 100-year-old blocks of rubber have appeared. But an amateur historian from England might have cracked the case.
Norway's Stian Westerhus does things with instruments you won't hear from anyone else.
Licorice is often referred to as "Bärendreck," or bear poop, in parts of Germany, Austria and Switzerland. But one sharp entrepreneur in Berlin has created a local sensation.
King County wants to make you a deal. They'll give you access to their sewage for free. You just have to do something with it. If this sounds like a bit of a raw deal, hang on. That sewage is actually warm, and could become a source for clean, renewable heat for buildings.
Off the coast of El Hierro, one of the smallest of the Canary Islands, a volcano is bubbling magma to the surface. If it carries on long enough, El Hierro could become bigger, or a new island could be former. For now, though, the locals just want it to go away so the tourists come back
The United States pioneered much of the internet. But US broadband connections now lag far behind much of the rest of the world.
Exploring some of the changes to the human landscape in the next decade, and what some experts are planning to do about them.
Warming climate conditions are causing southern European species of butterflies and other insects to migrate across the English Channel for the first time in recorded history.