I'm a dedicated researcher, journalist, and editor at The Watchers. With over 20 years of experience in the media industry, I specialize in hard science news, focusing on extreme weather, seismic and volcanic activity, space weather, and astronomy, including near-Earth objects and planetary defense strategies. You can reach me at teo /at/ watchers.news.

  • G2 – Moderate geomagnetic storm in progress, auroras possible from New York to Washington state

    A positive polarity coronal hole high speed stream currently interacting with Earth’s magnetic field produced a G2 – Moderate geomagnetic storm, with the K-index peaking at 6 at 20:00 UTC on February 16, 2026. The storm may generate visible aurora across northern U.S. latitudes and cause minor operational effects in satellite and power systems.

  • Geodetic strain data confirm Iberia’s slow clockwise rotation relative to Eurasia and Africa

    A new geophysical model integrating GNSS velocity data and earthquake focal mechanisms reveals that the Iberian Peninsula is rotating slowly clockwise relative to both Eurasia and Africa. The analysis, published in Gondwana Research in January 2026, maps present-day stress and strain-rate fields across Iberia and north-western Africa, refining the geometry of the diffuse Eurasia–Africa plate boundary.

  • Episode 42 shows high-intensity magma discharge and dual-vent activity at Kīlauea volcano

    Kīlauea volcano’s Halemaʻumaʻu crater produced one of its most intense eruptive episodes in months on February 15, 2026, when dual vents discharged lava at rates up to 780 m³/s (1 000 yd³/s) and fountains rose 400 m (1 300 feet) high before the activity paused at 23:38 HST. The episode released an estimated 11.4 million m³ (15 million yd³) of lava and covered about half of the crater floor.

  • Annular solar eclipse crosses Antarctica on February 17, 2026

    An annular solar eclipse will cross Antarctica on February 17, 2026, with the “ring of fire” phase confined to the continent and adjacent Southern Ocean waters. The event reaches its greatest eclipse at 12:11:54 UTC, when the Moon will cover 96.3% of the Sun’s diameter along the central path. A partial eclipse will be visible from southern South America, southern Africa, Madagascar, Réunion, Mauritius, and Antarctic coastal regions.

  • Strong M6.0 earthquake hits the Kuril Islands, Russia

    A strong earthquake registered by the USGS as M6.0 struck the Kuril Islands, Russia, at 15:58 UTC on February 15, 2026. The agency is reporting a depth of 55 km (34 miles). EMSC is reporting M6.0 at a depth of 50 km (31 miles).

  • Widespread flooding and landslides affect 2 million people across northern Morocco

    Severe flooding and landslides triggered by a series of Atlantic storms since late January 2026 have killed 43 people and displaced around 300 000 across northern Morocco. The hardest-hit areas include Sahel al-Gharb, Fez-Meknes, and the Rabat-Salé-Kénitra corridor, where heavy rainfall and overflowing rivers inundated 110 000 ha (272 000 acres) of farmland and damaged infrastructure.

  • Long-term correlation found between Earth’s magnetic field strength and atmospheric oxygen

    An analysis of paleomagnetic and geochemical proxy records shows that Earth’s geomagnetic field strength and atmospheric oxygen levels followed closely correlated trends over the past 540 million years. The findings show that both variables increased through the Phanerozoic and peaked together during the late Paleozoic.

  • Red Warning issued for heavy rain across Manawatū, Rangitīkei and Ruapehu Districts, New Zealand

    New Zealand’s MetService issued a Red Warning for heavy rain covering the Manawatū, Rangitīkei, and Ruapehu Districts at 14:36 NZDT (01:36 UTC) on February 15, 2026. The highest-level alert was issued in consultation with Horizons Regional Council as a deep low-pressure system moved south along the eastern North Island, with life-threatening flooding, slips, and river surges expected overnight into February 16. A pre-emptive state of emergency has been declared for the entire Horizons Region.

  • Geomagnetic storms possible this weekend as CME from M1.0 solar flare heads toward Earth

    An M1.0 solar flare erupted from Active Region 4373 at 08:58 UTC on February 13, 2026, launching a coronal mass ejection (CME) expected to glance Earth around February 15–16. SWPC forecasts G1 – Minor to isolated G2 – Moderate geomagnetic storm conditions as the CME interacts with a co-rotating interaction region and a positive-polarity coronal-hole high-speed stream.