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  • Sep 27, 2024 | reuters.com | Samuel Hart |Travis Hartman |Clare Trainor

    An image of Hurricane Helene from the international space station. Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tabTropical Storm Helene brought life-threatening flooding to the Carolinas on Friday after causing wide destruction through Florida and Georgia overnight, killing at least five people, swamping neighborhoods and leaving more than 4 million homes and businesses without power, opens new tab. , opens new tabClick here to read more.

  • Dec 31, 2023 | reuters.com | Adolfo Arranz |Jonathan Saul |Stephen Farrell |Simon Scarr |Clare Trainor

    Beneath the warscape of Gaza City lies a vast network of tunnels built by Palestinian militant group Hamas. Some entrance shafts are hidden among what remains of the city’s multi-storey buildings, ravaged by Israeli air strikes. Others are concealed in sandy dunes outside the city. Or tucked away in private homes. They lead to a warren of interconnecting passages that stretches below Gaza’s streets, extending for hundreds of miles into almost every area of the enclave.

  • Dec 8, 2023 | ca.sports.yahoo.com | Gloria Dickie |Travis Hartman |Clare Trainor

    DUBAI, Dec 9 (Reuters) - One after another, records have fallen in 2023 alongside skyrocketing temperatures. Deadly floods, heatwaves and storms have unfolded against the backdrop of what climate scientists say is set to be the world’s hottest year on record, with observations stretching back to the 1800s.

  • Dec 8, 2023 | nz.news.yahoo.com | Gloria Dickie |Travis Hartman |Clare Trainor

    By Gloria Dickie, Travis Hartman and Clare TrainorDUBAI, Dec 9 (Reuters) - One after another, records have fallen in 2023 alongside skyrocketing temperatures. Deadly floods, heatwaves and storms have unfolded against the backdrop of what climate scientists say is set to be the world’s hottest year on record, with observations stretching back to the 1800s.

  • Dec 8, 2023 | finance.yahoo.com | Gloria Dickie |Travis Hartman |Clare Trainor

    By Gloria Dickie, Travis Hartman and Clare TrainorDUBAI, Dec 9 (Reuters) - One after another, records have fallen in 2023 alongside skyrocketing temperatures. Deadly floods, heatwaves and storms have unfolded against the backdrop of what climate scientists say is set to be the world’s hottest year on record, with observations stretching back to the 1800s.

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