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A Manhattan wedding, a cancer scan, and the largest Atlantic hurricane ever recorded.
A man tells the story of when his mother predicted a hurricane the BBC didn’t.
“What shapes us? Do we shape as much as we are shaped?”
A photographer asks people for the meaning of life while traveling through the Great American Desert.
The California Dream is made possible by old water and big water. Unfortunately, the former doesn’t care about us, and the latter’s running dry. A native reports from the wine country, where fires loom.
This Saturday, the 2013 hurricane season will end—and with it, possibly, New York City’s final hurricane-less year.
Seeing the tornado damage in Oklahoma this week reminded me of the aftermath of a thousand-year flood that struck my city three years ago. My husband and I had three...
On Nov. 28, 1966, the SS Daniel J. Morrell capsized during a storm, taking 28 of its 29 crewmen to the bottom of Lake Huron. The sole survivor of a Great Lakes shipwreck tells his tale.
Predicting the weather is an incredibly complicated task. Stopping it altogether is even more difficult—but that doesn’t mean scientists aren’t trying. Obsession, cloud seeding, and very powerful storms.
In (hopefully) more lighthearted news, you may have also heard the story of little Abby Evans, a Colorado toddler who was so traumatized by the endless, aggressive presidential campaign that...
In our latest TMN Weekender, a selection of stories about when the weather goes awry. Ready to read here on TMN or in an e-book you can export to your...