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Topic: heat

Exhausted construction worker (Getty Images/FG Trade)

Heat threatens worker health: report

Matthew Rozsa
A Phoenix resident rests under shade while seeking protection from the sun and heat at the Human Services Campus during a record heat wave in Phoenix, Arizona, on July 18, 2023. (PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)

Climate change worsening homelessness

Matthew Rozsa
Desert sand dunes (Getty Images/MASTER)

Think outside an "uninhabitable" Earth

Matthew Rozsa
A member of the Prado fire crew pours water over his head to cool off in the 105 degree heat while putting out hotspots at the Rabbit fire on July 16, 2023 in Beaumont, CA. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Last 12 months were hottest in history

Matthew Rozsa
The skull of an animal of the camelidae group on the dry Oued Tijekht in the Moroccan Sahara desert, near the central city of Tafraout in Morocco. (JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK/AFP via Getty Images)

Our planet is simply getting too hot

Matthew Rozsa
Marine biologist Greg Lewbart holds a marine iguana. (Courtesy of Passion Planet Ltd.)

How animals are impacted by climate

Matthew Rozsa
Exhausted construction worker (Getty Images/FG Trade)

Workers pay the price under extreme heat

Amy Maxmen - KFF Health News
Amazon rainforest, Brazil (Getty Images)

High heat can stop plant photosynthesis

Katie Myers - Grist
Top view of a paper bag full of canned food, fruits, vegetables, eggs, a milk bottle, berries, mushrooms, nuts, pasta, a chocolate bar and bread. (Getty Images)

Heat's adverse impact on food security

Brett Wilkins - Common Dreams
An aerial view of the almost dried up Zernek Dam due to the heat and excessive evaporation in the last months in Gurpinar district of Van, Turkiye on September 28, 2022. (Necat Hazar/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Climate change worsens isolation

Akielly Hu - Grist
The sun sets behind the Statue of Liberty as it is partially obscured by heat waves from the exhaust of a passing ferry on May 31, 2020, in New York City. (Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)

July was the hottest month in history

Matthew Rozsa
A UPS worker delivers boxes in Manhattan. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

340,000 UPS drivers poised to strike

Tushar Khurana - Grist
A field of stag-horn coral bleached white on the Great Barrier Reef (Getty Images/Brett Monroe Garner)

Record heat is bleaching coral

Ian Enochs - The Conversation
Dry soil of the partially dried-up river bed of the Rhine is pictured in Duesseldorf, western Germany, on July 25, 2022, as Europe experiences a heatwave. (INA FASSBENDER/AFP via Getty Images)

European 2022 heat wave killed 61,000

Nicole Karlis
White-eyed Vireo (Kelly Colgan Azar/Flickr)

Earlier spring equals fewer baby birds

Nicole Karlis
The sun sets behind the Statue of Liberty as it is partially obscured by heat waves from the exhaust of a passing ferry on May 31, 2020, in New York City. (Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)

Heat this summer will cost $1 billion

Zoya Teirstein - Grist
Sun rises over mountains as seen from the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, California, United States on September 3, 2022. (Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

The past 8 years were hottest in history

Lylla Younes - Grist
Heat waves rise near a heat danger warning sign on the eve of the AdventurCORPS Badwater 135 ultra-marathon race on July 14, 2013 in Death Valley National Park, California. (David McNew/Getty Images)

90% of humans will suffer drought, heat

Matthew Rozsa
Glen Canyon Dam is a concrete arch dam on the Colorado River in northern Arizona in the United States, near the town of Page. (Getty Images/Spondylolithesis)

Can the Hoover Dam survive the drought?

Emily Pontecorvo - Grist
Sunny sky (Getty Images/Roman Studio)

With more sizzling summers, Colorado changes how heat advisories are issued

Markian Hawryluk - KFF Health News
(Getty/IP Galanternik D.U.)

Engineers on how to conserve A/C energy

Aisling Pigott, Jennifer Scheib, Kyri Baker - The Conversation
Iceberg melting in Disko Bay in Greenland (Getty Images/Paul Souders)

Arctic greening won’t save the climate

Donatella Zona - The Conversation
The sun sets behind power lines in Los Angeles, California. (Getty Images)

Dangerous heat exposure has tripled

Cascade Tuholske, Chris Funk, Kathryn Grace - The Conversation

Create your own personal microclimate

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