New Scientist selects 2025's top natural world photos

New Scientist has compiled a striking collection of images capturing key environmental events of 2025, from volcanic eruptions to glacial collapses. These photos highlight the year's dramatic natural phenomena, underscoring the impacts of climate change. The selection features scenes from Sicily to Greenland, illustrating both destructive forces and natural wonders.

In its review of 2025's environmental stories, New Scientist showcases photographs that document a year marked by extreme weather and geological activity. One image from February captures Mount Etna's eruption in Sicily, the world's most active stratovolcano. Ash clouds rose alongside a lava flow extending 3 kilometres, leading to a partial closure of a nearby airport. The European Space Agency's Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellite recorded the scene on 12 February.

A dramatic photo from July depicts a massive iceberg in Innaarsuit, western Greenland, towering over the village of 180 residents for more than a week. Authorities urged caution due to risks of collapse or tsunamis, marking the second such incident in under a decade amid accelerating glacial melt.

Hurricane Melissa's devastation in Jamaica on 28 October is another highlight. With winds nearing 300 kilometres per hour and 76 centimetres of rain, the storm—tied for the strongest Atlantic landfall ever—destroyed buildings in Black River. Early studies attribute a 16 kilometre-per-hour wind boost to climate change, part of a record-tying year with three category 5 hurricanes.

The collection also includes the Qiantang River's tidal bore in China, observed in Jiaxing in October. Known as the 'silver dragon,' this wave reaches 9 metres high and travels at 40 kilometres per hour, drawing spectators and surfers.

A tragic landslide on 29 May buried much of the 800-year-old Swiss village of Blatten when 9 million tonnes of rock collapsed the Birch glacier, equivalent to a magnitude 3.1 earthquake. The area was evacuated, resulting in one fatality, with scientists linking the event to permafrost thaw. At current emission rates, 90 per cent of Alpine glaciers may vanish by 2100.

January's wildfires in northern Los Angeles razed neighbourhoods like Pacific Palisades, killing 31 people, destroying 16,000 structures, and causing damages in the hundreds of billions of dollars—potentially the costliest US disaster. Factors include extended fire seasons from global warming and policies encouraging development near wildlands.

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Devastated flooded landscape in northern Philippines after Super Typhoon Uwan, with displaced people and rescuers amid storm debris, highlighting climate crisis effects.
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Super typhoon Uwan devastates northern Philippines amid rising climate risks

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Super Typhoon Uwan battered northern Philippines in November 2025, causing 25 deaths and displacing over 1.4 million people. The UN praised the country's preparedness but warned of more frequent powerful storms due to the climate crisis. At COP30, delegates discussed the urgent need for adaptation funding.

Spain's 2025 summer wildfires, which razed 400,000 hectares, rank among the world's most devastating climate disasters of the year, according to Christian Aid's annual review. This event continues a pattern of severe climate impacts placing Spain in international vulnerability rankings. Experts link these disasters to the continued expansion of fossil fuels and political delays in climate action.

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A series of wildfires struck Los Angeles in January 2025, burning vast areas and causing widespread destruction. Driven by climate change factors, the blazes killed dozens directly and hundreds more through smoke exposure. The event highlighted escalating environmental risks in the region.

Earth's oceans reached their highest heat levels on record in 2025, absorbing 23 zetta joules of excess energy. This milestone, confirmed by an international team of scientists, underscores the accelerating impact of climate change. The warming trend, building since the 1990s, fuels stronger storms and rising sea levels worldwide.

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Building on recent studies like Stefan Rahmstorf et al.'s analysis showing a doubling of Earth's warming rate to ~0.36°C per decade since 2014, scientists disagree on whether reductions in aerosol pollution or natural fluctuations are driving the speedup. Nearly all agree warming has accelerated, but views differ on causes, rate, and future trajectory—with implications for climate sensitivity and adaptation.

A powerful magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula on July 29, 2025, triggering a massive tsunami across the Pacific. NASA's SWOT satellite captured unprecedented high-resolution images of the waves, showing they were far more intricate and scattered than expected. This discovery challenges traditional models of tsunami behavior and could improve future predictions.

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A new study warns of an interdisciplinary blind spot that could force 132 million people to flee rising sea levels, which could rise by up to 150 centimeters. Swedish oceanographer Ola Kalén at SMHI describes the acceleration of sea level rise since the 1960s as shocking.

 

 

 

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