-
Satellite observations are capturing the rapid retreat of Antarctica’s Hektoria Glacier, where ice loss has accelerated dramatically in recent years. The imagery reveals fractured ice, expanding melt zones and newly exposed terrain as the glacier continues to destabilize. Scientists attribute the retreat to a combination of ocean warming and structural weakening of the glacier’s ice
-
April 20th, 2026
Drought-Parched Florida Mapped from SpaceNearly all of Florida faced at least “moderate” drought in April 2026, and nearly 80 percent of the state fell under “extreme” conditions—some of the worst on record. The Floridan aquifer dropped to its lowest levels since 2011, prompting water-management districts to issue mandatory outdoor watering restrictions across multiple regions. The map above combines data
-
April 7th, 2026
Barents Sea Tied to Low Arctic Sea IceAt the top of the planet, the cap of sea ice across Arctic waters grows and shrinks with the seasons, usually reaching its annual maximum extent in March. In 2026, this peak occurred on March 15, when the extent reached 14.29 million square kilometers, matching the lowest maximum observed since satellite monitoring began in 1979. One
-
March 24th, 2026
Earth’s Magnetic Field During Peak Solar FlareFrom Jan. 19-22, 2026, a particularly strong X-class solar flare caused a geomagnetic storm in Earth’s atmosphere, with some of the most intense radiation storms on record. The cause was an eruption on the Sun’s surface, which released high-energy particles that reached Earth within 25 hours. ESA’s ice mission, CryoSat, had just received an important software update, enabling the mission

