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London could lose most of its trees by 2090 due to climate change
Within the lifetime of children being born today, the global human population is projected to begin shrinking for the first time since the Black Death — no country on Earth currently has a fertility rate above 7 children per woman, and dozens of high-income nations have fallen below 1.5 — in a civilizational shift that demographers now expect to end the era of sustained population growth that has defined humanity for the past several thousand years
After back-to-back wins in northern states, BJP eyes South, sets agenda for Telangana polls
London train breaks down during heatwave forcing 200 passengers to be evacuated along railway track
Teens react to Starmer’s UK social media ban for under-16s: the ‘right thing’ but ‘unlikely to make much difference’
A survey of 64 limestone caves in Cambodia, reported in March 2026, turned up around 11 species new to science, among them a turquoise pit viper, a flying snake, geckos, micro-snails and millipedes
Nevada is America’s fastest-growing state, report says
European royalty in crisis: Andrew, Epstein and Norwegian rape trial
London bus drivers to vote on strike over hot conditions
Heat dome could push NYC temperatures to over 100 this week
Lake Mead’s slow demise just sped up in latest federal study
Kristian Winfield: New York City has crowned the Knicks king
Scientists say the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could collapse with very little additional warming and the four metres of sea level rise that would follow cannot be stopped once it begins
Prakash Raj tells Cockroach Janta Party founder Abhijeet Dipke to continue with his fight: ‘We stand by you’
Marcos calls for Congress special session
Europe heatwave: Fact check on AC ban, sleeping with fans and climate change claims
UK's Starmer mulls 'political realities' after Burnham by-election
Sandiganbayan orders Jinggoy Estrada’s suspension
Dangerous "heat stress" surges worldwide as global temperatures soar
The first dinosaur bone ever discovered on the continent of Antarctica was confirmed last week, forty years after it was picked up on the Antarctic Peninsula in 1985 and stored in a museum drawer in Cambridge — a tail vertebra from a titanosaur, the group that included the largest animals ever to walk on land