Scientists and X users react to claims by a Georgia Congresswoman that Californian wildfires could be put out with cloud seeding.
The Palisades and Eaton wildfires also continue burning in the Los Angeles area, leaving parts of Southern California with devastating fire damage.
Rain has mostly moved out of Southern California after the first significant storm of the season brought weekend downpours ...
Reflecting intensifying wildfires and updated science, new state maps designate more than 2.3 million acres of local land in ...
As fire crews and air tankers work to block the wildfires' explosive growth, images of red clouds of fire retardant falling onto trees are common. What is it — and what's in it?
The winds fueling fires in Southern California are beginning to relax, but the forecast calls for their return next week.
For cloud seeding to be effective ... Another unfounded claim shared on social media suggests the Southern California wildfires were started to clear land so officials could make way for what ...
Fires in California have been found to spread up to ... Extreme heat from wildfires can create pyrocumulonimbus clouds, which can spark new fires miles away. These clouds can exacerbate fire ...
“Why don’t they use geoengineering like cloud seeding to bring rain down on the wildfires in California? They know how to do it,” Greene posted to X over the weekend. X users were quick to ...
As if they aren't already facing enough, firefighters in California also could encounter ... whirls are formed only by heat, while fire tornadoes involve clouds generated by the fire itself.
While the headlines are focused on Southern California this time ... typically used to fight wildland fires with massive buckets of water and clouds of retardants. Between the winds, the dry ...
Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene has called on a mysterious “they” to use “cloud seeding” to stop the California wildfires — once again peddling false claims about officials’ purported ...