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Hazards & Disasters

Four graphs from the paper showing temperature trends and probability of heat events.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Characteristics of the 2021 Pacific Northwest Heatwave

by Suzana Camargo 30 November 20222 December 2022

Examining the 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave using both historical observations and model simulations.

Un rayo aparece en medio de nubes de cenizas y vapor que están saliendo de volcán a la atmósfera sobre el océano.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Monitoreando el agua en la columna eruptiva masiva del volcán de Tonga

Sarah Stanley, Science Writer by Sarah Stanley 15 November 202230 November 2022

La reciente erupción del volcán Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai arrojó aerosoles de sulfatos y una cantidad nunca antes vista de vapor de agua a la estratosfera.

Photo of a dry Peabody River—brown and gray boulders in a streambed in center, surrounded by greenery.
Posted inNews

U.S. Streams Are Drying Up

by Jennifer Schmidt 28 October 20228 November 2022

A new study reports that streamflow drought is getting more intense in some parts of the United States, a phenomenon that is stressing the nation’s water policy and infrastructure.

Maps of study region and graphs from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Under Pressure: Recording Earthquakes at and Below the Seafloor

by Sergei Lebedev 27 October 202230 November 2022

Cabled ocean-floor observatories record ground shaking and pressure variations, which contribute to early warning systems and give us a unique view of the ocean–crust coupling.

A mass of steaming, orange-glowing lava consumes a street sign as it flows over a roadway.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

A Better Operational Lava Flow Model

by Morgan Rehnberg 26 October 202226 October 2022

By segmenting the vertical structure of a lava flow, the Lava2d model provides more realism to operational lava forecasts.

A photo of a hurricane from space.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

What is the Best Predictor of Landfalling Hurricane Damage?

by Jonathan Zawislak 21 October 202218 October 2022

A new study finds that the minimum sea level pressure, as another measure of hurricane strength, is a better predictor of hurricane damage in the United States than the maximum sustained wind speed.

白雪覆盖的山峰排列在青藏高原的南部边缘。
Posted inResearch Spotlights

研究揭示尼泊尔西部喜马拉雅港湾状地形的形成

Sarah Derouin, Science Writer by Sarah Derouin 19 October 202219 October 2022

研究人员通过热运动学研究发现,沿着板块汇聚界面大型逆冲断层在中下部地壳深处的地壳物质堆叠塑造了高原的生长和区域水系的发育。

Sandbags of wildfire debris are spread on Goleta Beach, Calif.
Posted inNews

Managing Mudslide Debris After Fires

by Robin Donovan 14 October 202214 October 2022

California officials faced a conundrum in dealing with mudslides after the Thomas Fire.

Two diagrams showing the dry and moist simulations.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

How Can Nuclear Plumes Reach the Stratosphere?

by Minghua Zhang 13 October 202211 October 2022

A new study shows how moist convection can lift sooty air from firestorms to the stratosphere, potentially leading to a nuclear winter.

Edificios inca marrones con una calle en medio. Al fondo se distinguen los Andes y un cielo azul con pocas nubes.
Posted inNews

Grabado en piedra: edificios incas guardan el registro de terremotos antiguos

by Erin Martin-Jones 13 October 202222 March 2023

Daños a los edificios incas en Cusco revelan una historia de terremotos olvidada que podría ayudar a científicos a entender riesgos sísmicos modernos.

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Features from AGU Journals

RESEARCH SPOTLIGHTS
Geophysical Research Letters
“Neural Networks Map the Ebb and Flow of Tiny Ponds”
By Sarah Derouin

EDITORS' HIGHLIGHTS
Community Science
“Collaboration Helps Overcome Challenges in Air Quality Monitoring”
By Muki Haklay

EDITORS' VOX
Reviews of Geophysics
“What We Know and Don’t Know About Climate Tipping Elements”
By Seaver Wang

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