![A judge's gavel resting on a pile of one-dollar bills](https://d.newsweek.com/en/full/2310254/drought-rain.jpg?w=397&h=265&f=d5094df6f8b05b3500915c615d708e0a)
How Exactly El Niño Will Help Drought-Stricken States
A huge rearrangement of ocean heat during El Niño will alter atmospheric wind patterns, meaning drier regions tend will receive more rainfall.
A huge rearrangement of ocean heat during El Niño will alter atmospheric wind patterns, meaning drier regions tend will receive more rainfall.
States with the highest rates of increasing hospitalizations include Alaska, Hawaii, South Dakota, Kentucky, Delaware and Rhode Island.
The AI acts as a "virtual observatory," extrapolating the solar polar regions' appearance from neighboring areas we have imaged.
The chronic neurotoxin known as BMAA has been linked to neurodegenerative illnesses, such as Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.
The South Pole's ozone hole was 10 million square miles on September 21, ranking it as the 12th largest single-day ozone hole since 1979.
Researchers found a rich collection of artifacts, including pottery, ancient wine vessels, ornamental accessories and iron and bronze objects.
"It has absolutely changed the way that I think about this group of animals," evolution expert said.
Six of the 35 elephants found dead in Zimbabwe in 2020 were discovered to have bizarre unclassified bacteria in their bodies.
"When people intentionally attract bears with trash and food, it can lead to very dangerous situations," said parks superintendent Tracy Swartout.
One fossil is the largest ever found of the species in the world with "superbly preserved teeth."
The spider had crawled into the woman's ear canal and molted its exoskeleton, making strange noises that kept the woman awake.
"If you put flippers on a Komodo dragon and made it really big, that's basically what it would have looked like," the lead author of the study said.
"He pulled him back down, brought him back up, pulled him back down again," one witness told local media.
"Our study suggests that fewer birds migrate during large geomagnetic storms," study author and University of Michigan ecologist Ben Winger told Newsweek.
The ancient people used aquatic plants and flowers to filter and clean the water in their reservoirsâsomething that may be worth trying nowadays.