News

Because of melting sea ice, it is likely that more polar bears will soon starve, warns a new study that discovered the large carnivores need to eat 60 percent more than anyone had realized.
Polar bears enjoy swimming in cold water for hunting, cooling off, and playing, and they are majestic to watch.
A few years back, a particularly imaginative young boy came into Georgina Berg’s kindergarten class in Churchill, Canada, ...
Aaron Blaise's latest animated short, "Snow Bear," uses polar bears in the melting Arctic to process his own feelings of ...
You don’t have to pay much attention to the news to know that climate change is causing Arctic sea ice to melt—and to understand ... Arctic foxes and polar bears often try to root out the ...
Glaciers and sea ice are melting at alarming rates—but why is this happening, and what does it mean for our planet? In this 1 ...
Blowing Rock, North Carolina stands as the antidote to modern chaos – a mountain sanctuary where the air is fresher, the pace ...
Ten years ago, policymakers and nation states set the world’s most important climate goal: limiting planetary warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit). If the Earth could stay ...
Two tourists visiting Arctic Bay to document the effects of climate change and to photograph polar bears wound up in hot water with the locals.
We know there’s trouble with polar bear habitat (the polar bear is also known as white bear, nanook, sea bear and ice bear). We also know some polar phenomena might cease to exist in our lifetime.