Michael Rawlins

Extension Associate Professor and Associate Director, Climate System Research Center University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Amherst MA

Michael Rawlins seeks to connect and understand water, energy and carbon cycling across the earth's land, atmosphere and ocean domains.

Contact

Expertise

Climatology
Hydrology
Arctic Science
Climate
Hydrology of Arctic Environments
Climate Change

Biography

Michael Rawlins comments on the impact of climate change on the earth. Most recently he's appeared in print and video discussing evidence he's found that thawing permafrost in northern Alaska is altering the hydrological system of the Arctic, which disrupts the region’s inhabitants and changes the environment into a source of carbon emission.

As associate director of the Climate System Research Center at UMass, he's also often called on to explain how climate change is affecting life in the Northeast United States.

Social Media

Video

Education

University of New Hampshire

Ph.D.

Earth and Environmental Sciences

University of Delaware

M.S.

Geography/Climatology

University of Delaware

B.S.

Environmental Science

Select Recent Media Coverage

We Ruined Rain

The Atlantic  online

2024-06-20

Michael Rawlins, associate director of the Climate Research Center, comments in an article about how climate change has made rainfall a peril rather than a benefit. Rawlins says that just as societies developed because of the use of fossil fuels and that led to problems from carbon emissions, water made life possible, but because of climate change, water too, “is almost coming back to bite us.”

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The Earth had its warmest May ever, the 12th record-breaking month in a row. How does New England stack up?

The Boston Globe  print

2024-05-31

“The recent run of 11 consecutive record global average temperatures is hard to comprehend, and it means that we may not fully understand how the various factors are contributing to the sharp uptick in heat in recent years,” says Michael Rawlins, associate director of Climate System Research Center at UMass Amherst. Rawlins’ comments are in response to data showing that May was the warmest on record on planet Earth.

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The plants tell the story: Massachusetts’ coldest days not nearly so cold

The Boston Globe  print

2023-11-17

Michael Rawlins comments in an article reporting that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has updated its plant hardiness map to reflect the warmer climate over the past 30 years. Among other changes, the new map removes pockets in north-central and western Massachusetts where temperatures were expected to reach as low as 15-20 degrees Fahrenheit below zero at least once each winter. “There should be no doubt that a warming climate attributable to human activities, namely the burning of fossil fuels, is the dominant influence on these changes,” Rawlins says.

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Select Publications

Arctic rivers face big changes with a warming climate, permafrost thaw and an accelerating water cycle − the effects will have global consequences

The Conversation

Michael Rawlins and Ambarish Karmalkar

2024-03-05

”As the Arctic warms, its mighty rivers are changing in ways that could have vast consequences – not only for the Arctic region but for the world. ... We’re climate scientists who study how warming is influencing the water cycle and ecosystems. In a new study using historical data and sophisticated computer models of Earth’s climate and hydrology, we explored how climate change is altering Arctic rivers. ...”

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Why a warming climate can bring bigger snowstorms

The Conversation

Michael Rawlins

2022-02-02

Michael Rawlins writes about the effects of climate change on snowstorms. “The sharp increase in high-impact Northeast winter storms is an expected manifestation of a warming climate,” Rawlins says. “It’s another risk the U.S. will have to prepare for as extreme events become more common with climate change."

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