M 8.2 Earthquake – 91 km ESE of Perryville, Alaska

New Geologic Map Reveals Portland's Deep History

USGS Data on the Lebanon Blast

What's Going on Under Norris Geyser Basin?

23 mineral commodities, including some rare earth elements, cobalt, niobium and tungsten, are posing the greatest supply risk for the U.S

A Tapestry of Time and Terrain (2013)

Yellowstone's migrating bison manipulate springtime green-up

USGS Interactive Earthquake Map

U.S. Wind Turbine Database Viewer

M8.0 Earthquake Northern Peru

USGS Announces Largest Continuous Oil Assessment in Texas and New Mexico

First Comprehensive List of Non-Native Species Established in Three Major Regions of the United States -- Open File Report -- US Interior Dept., and USGS

Map Projections – A Working Manual (1987)

Kīlauea – Current Maps – May 2018

Hawaiian Volcano Observatory issues “Red” aviation warning relating to Kīlauea

New USGS groundwater model visualization tool is now available to help users visualize the inputs and outputs of complex groundwater models across the country

6.4 Earthquake hits Taiwan

M4.5 Earthquake, Berkeley, CA

Previous Evidence of Water on Mars Now Identified as Grainflows

8.1 Earthquake Strikes Pijijiapan, Mexico

Earthquake from N Korea nuclear test

Study Links Major Floods in North America and Europe to Multi-Decade Ocean Patterns

USGS Releases New JavaScript Library to Create Location Search Widgets for Web Applications

Glaciers Rapidly Shrinking and Disappearing: 50 Years of Glacier Change in Montana

Researchers found the sea floor eroding in five large coral reef tracts, and the reefs cannot keep pace with sea level rise

Using a newly-developed computer model scientists predict that with limited human intervention, 31% to 67% of Southern California beaches may become completely eroded (up to existing coastal infrastructure or sea-cliffs) by the year 2100 under scenarios of sea-level rise of one to two meters.

Climate change is making desert soil color lighter, reflecting more sunlight back into atmosphere.

A new study measures the transport of chemicals associated with unconventional oil and gas (UOG) produced waters downstream from a pipeline leak in North Dakota

Microplastics in our Nations's waterways

Evidence of Unconventional Oil and Gas Wastewater Found in Surface Waters near Underground Injection Site

More →