Erin, Atlantic and national hurricane center
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Earth scientists reveal how Atlantic Ocean circulation has changed over the past 12,000 years
Using geochemical analyses of marine sediments, researchers have been able to quantitatively reconstruct the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation over the past 12,000 years. The international research team,
Forecasters are tracking a new disturbance in the Atlantic Ocean as Hurricane Erin, a Category 5 storm, undergoes an eyewall replacement cycle, according to a Saturday night update from the National Hurricane Center.
The first hurricane of the 2025 season intensified into a Category 5 storm Saturday before reverting back to Category 4 status Saturday night. The storm is forecast to turn north just before the
Anomalies in temperature and salinity that originate in the midlatitude North Atlantic can affect the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in the Nordic Seas up to a decade later. A new study published in Communications Earth & Environment shows that the anomalies that travel northward with the Atlantic Water are an important part of the system,
Flight 720 from Charlotte to Rome had to turn back over the Atlantic Ocean due to a possible mechanical issue.
Jean-Raymond Bidlot, senior scientist in ocean modeling at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) told Newsweek that Erin is forecast to strengthen over the next week as it heads toward the U.S. East Coast, reaching peak intensity offshore from Cape Hatteras.
In a first, two Indian aquanauts have plunged more than 4,000 m and 5,000 m below sea level in the North Atlantic Ocean. This was stated by the Ministry of Earth Sciences on Thursday. The achievement comes weeks after Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla became the first Indian to visit the International Space Station.
In a first for the country, two Indian aquanauts have taken dives to depths of nearly 4,000 metres and 5,000 metres in the Atlantic Ocean on board the French submersible Nautile — the deepest an Indian has ever gone underwater — as part of preparations for Samudrayaan,