• Open-source archive of active faults for northwest South America

    The article titled “Open-source archive of active faults for northwest South America,” by Gabriel Veloza and colleagues  introduces the “Active Tectonics of the Andes Database”. It should provide more data to more geoscientists. Their work includes the locations and

  • GOES satellites changed positions in space

    The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA) on Sept. 24 said it has moved a spare geostationary weather satellite, GOES-14, into position to replace the GOES-13 satellite that suffered an unexplained outage Sept. 23 that engineers have been unable to

  • Two new tropical storms formed in Pacific – Gaemi and Maliksi

    Jelawat  faded away and two new tropical storms are forming in western Pacific. Maliksi is pushing towards outer islands of Japan including the Izu islands and Gaemi is going to be of threat to the Philippines, Vietnam and possibly southern China. Gaemi will enhance

  • Nadine weakens to a Tropical Storm again

    Nadine weakens a little more and becomes a Tropical Storm again.Nadine formed as a tropical depression over the Atlantic Ocean on September 11, 2012, and strengthened to a tropical storm the following day. Between September 12 and October 1, 2012, Nadine’s status

  • M 6.2 off the east coast of Honshu, Japan

    Strong and shallow earthquake M6.2 occurred on October 1 at 22:21:45 UTC off the east coast of Honshu, Japan. The epicenter was located 97 km (60 miles) ENE of Miyako (39.853°N, 143.047°E) at depth of 9.7 km (6.0 miles). JMA Japan reports a M6.3 at a depth of 10

  • Jelawat loosing power, lots of damage left in Japan

    Tropical Storm Jelawat is located approximately 70 nm west of Yokosuka and 105 nm south of Misawa, Japan and is accelerating northeastward at 39 knots (72 km/h)over the past six hours. The low-level circulation center (LLCC) has made landfall and is quickly tracking

  • Deep subduction M 7.2 earthquake hit Colombia

    Powerful earthquake M7.2 hit Colombia at 16:31 UTC on September 30, 2012. The epicenter was located 9 km (5 miles) WNW of Isnos, Colombia (1.969°N, 76.315°W) at depth of 150.4 km (93.5 miles). USGS initially  measured magnitude 7.4 but was later revisited at 7.1