November in the north of England is not known for birdsong, snowdrops, and blossom.
Milder side effects of a warming world are included.
Warming temperatures are blamed for causing the deaths of people in floods and the shortage of mustard on the planet.
Climate change can be devastating. Some are strange.
Some Russian scientists believe that warmer ground temperatures cause underground pockets of gas to explode. Land that has been frozen continuously for more than two years is referred to as permafrost.
There is only one hypothesis for the creation of giant craters.
They are a quiet sign that the landscape at the north of our planet is changing.
The research shows that the world's warmest region is four times faster than the rest of the planet.
Climate change could be dimming the planet's "shine", according to scientists at the Big Bear Solar Observatory.
Earth's reflectiveness was measured by measuring the sunlight reflected from Earth to the dark part of the moon at night.
According to the studies, the amount of low cloud cover over the eastern Pacific Ocean is decreasing.
The reflected light from the Sun is lost when the clouds act like mirrors. Scientists say that we might be taking the shine off our blue dot.
We might be causing global warming, but it's not the only species that's feeling it. There are some creatures that are affected in unexpected ways.
The sex of offspring is determined by the temperature at which the eggs are kept. The central bearded dragons are a species of lizard found in Australia. As the world warms, scientists are concerned that males could become rare, which could lead to extinction.
Fish may lose their sense of smell due to rising levels of carbon dioxide in the ocean.
Climate change is messing up the seasons. In the UK's most scientifically studied woodland, hatchlings emerged from their eggs up to three weeks earlier than in the 1940s.
The food chain in the spring has changed with the warming of the world, as the birds and oak tree caterpillars reach their peak weeks earlier than before.
Birds are adjusting to the change in seasons. The bees are usually found in the southern Mediterranean and northern Africa.
The sound is changing. London has become a hot spot for unseasonal birds. A study suggests that forest birds were moving higher up in the trees to make their calls louder.
It's hard to grow food in extreme weather. Coffee, wheat, and corn are some of the things that are affected. There have been some shortage of condiments this year.
In April, a California-based company sent a letter to customers warning of a "severe shortage" of chillies.
Stores in France ran out of Dijon mustard in the summer because of bad weather in the Canadian Prairies.
Climate change is making it difficult to go carbon-free. There wasn't enough cool water in the French rivers in August, which led to a reduction in nuclear power station output.
At the UN climate summit, 200 countries are discussing a cut in planet-warming gases.
We've already changed our world by warming it up, and there are likely to be many more surprises.