This week’s science news was awash with alarming updates from the world’s oceans, with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declaring the official onset of El Niño.

El Niño is the warm phase of a multiyear natural climate pattern in the Pacific Ocean that supercharges temperatures across the globe, and this one is looking to be particularly strong, earning it the unofficial moniker of a “super” El Niño. Just how intense is it? It will likely become the strongest in history, most climate models predict, and it may have profound effects on rainfall, wildfires and agricultural yields across the planet.

The Artemis III crew from left to right: Andre Douglas, Luca Parmitano, Randy Bresnik, and Frank Rubio

(Image credit: NASA)

A cow lifts its tail and pees, looking back at the camera while standing in a green pasture

Was your water once peed out by an animal?

(Image credit: Monica Murphy via Getty Images)

Was your water once peed out by an animal?

(Image credit: Monica Murphy via Getty Images)

The inside of the skull of Individual 1 shows cut marks, possibly made during brain removal.

(Image credit: Castells Navarro et al. / Antiquity Publications Ltd.)

A panorama image of the Milky Way captured in Catamarca, Argentina.

(Image credit: Daniel Viñé Garcia/Capture the Atlas.)

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