A $300,000 grant cut to the Alaska Earthquake Center could force nine stations offline and delay warnings for Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California and Hawaii, the senator warns.
Hundreds of demonstrators gather Monday to protest Department of Government Efficiency cuts outside the headquarters of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Silver Spring, Md. A ...
In Alaska, a federal grant that funded seismic data collection in order to warn people about tsunamis is being cancelled. Experts say cuts like this could make tsunami warnings less reliable.
A magnitude 7.6 earthquake rocked Northern Japan early Monday and triggered a tsunami warning along its coast, but the ...
It’s been a rough time for my colleagues at the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Nearly 900 positions have been eliminated over the past two weeks, just over 7% of NOAA’s ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ended a contract with the Alaska Earthquake Center that helped maintain some seismic stations and transmit data in real time. Alaska state ...
This image captures the modeled propagation of the tsunami wave generated by an 8.8 magnitude megathrust earthquake off the coast of Kamchatcka, Russia on July 29,2025. When an 8.8 magnitude ...
A Ph.D. scientist who issues tsunami alerts. A hurricane-hunting flight director. A researcher studying which communities will get flooded when a storm strikes. They were among the more than 600 ...
The fresh, detailed glimpse into the geophysical phenomenon came after NASA and CNSE's SWOT satellite captured the tsunami ...
With their attention now focused on boosting hurricane preparedness in the aftermath of Katrina, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration officials are also wrestling with thin preparedness for ...
When the Palisades fire raged and winds whipped ash and debris into the Pacific Ocean, scientists with the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration — already out in boats doing water-quality ...
The corridors of National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration offices remain eerily quiet this week despite a federal court order reinstating hundreds of recently terminated employees.