
I hoped for a chill in the air, snow on the ground, and Jack Frost nipping at various extremities. Instead, I got 40-degree days and rain.

Think climate change is a hoax? Fine. But first watch this video catalog of all the recent "record-breaking" weather events.

Behold the awesome power of nature. Here's the view from space of Massachusetts' 39-mile tornado scar slicing across the state.

You know of the disasters that struck Tuscaloosa and Joplin. But have you heard of Piedmont, Oklahoma?

Check out the incredible conquest Monsanto embarked upon in 1958.

Residents in the Mississippi Delta need to be preparing for floods of historic proportions.

It's impossible to know what factor global warming had in the tornado outbreak last week. But we do know that short-term forecasting saved lives.

Watch this video and learn what we know and don't know about how tornadoes form.

We too are hoping and praying for the drought to end in Texas. But we better listen to science, too.
Teachers have long embraced Skype. Now the company is embracing them back with special features for educators.

The only thing more impressive than this winter's recent snowfall has been the hyperbolic language we've used to describe it.

Finally, an explanation we can all understand about why a warmer Arctic can cause freezing winters in North America. Dr. Heidi Cullen explains.

Lower Manhattan, Brooklyn, and much of Long Island are terribly vulnerable to sea level rise and storm surge.

A cheeky British video solves public confusion of weather and climate once and for all.

Another massive winter storm that pummels the country means another occasion to explain climate change's connection to weather.

ABC News (again!) delivers quality climate and weather reporting to a mainstream nightly news audience. Their secret: talking to climate scientists.

Heat waves and floods! A bunch of weather and climate experts have compiled an authoritative list of the "Top Ten global weather events of 2010."

NOAA is about to redefine what "normal" weather is across the country. In most of the country's 10,000 regions, that will be warmer and wetter.