News

Hurricane Flossie strengthened to a Category 3 cyclone late Tuesday while remaining off the Pacific coast of Mexico. Flossie had maximum sustained winds of 185 kph (115 mph) and ...
Hurricane Flossie intensified into a major cyclone (Category 3 or stronger) on Tuesday and will continue to head away from the Mexican coastline.
Hurricane Erick is rapidly intensifying in the Eastern Pacific Ocean and is about 50 miles south-southeast of Puerto Angel, Mexico.
And many Pacific islanders already don't eat enough protein, according to UN Food and Agriculture Organization guidelines. Deploying fish-aggregating devices may bring more fish closer to shore in the ...
Pacific island countries are disproportionately affected by global inaction. Rising seas are making some nations uninhabitable. Cyclones have grown more deadly and destructive.
Cone forecast for Tropical Depression One-E and current water temperatures in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. (FOX Weather) Mexico’s National Weather Service forecasts that there will be enough warm water ...
Aurora could accurately predict tropical cyclone paths, air pollution and ocean waves, as well as global weather at the scale of towns or cities — offering up forecasts in a matter of seconds.
Last year is one example, with just 2 tropical cyclones moving through the Central Pacific; however, one of them was Hurricane Hone, which made its closest approach to the state as a Category 1 ...
Multiple National Weather Service (NWS) offices along the U.S. West Coast have issued weather alerts warning of dangerous ocean conditions caused by a strong offshore storm. Why It Matters As of ...
An Australian warship on Monday rescued a Lithuanian solo rower who had encountered a tropical cyclone while attempting to cross the Pacific Ocean from California. Aurimas Mockus was taken aboard ...
A rare image of three cyclones circling over the South Pacific Ocean has been captured, as Tropical Cyclone Alfred strengthens off the Queensland coast. Emma Kirk less than 2 min read ...
Our study, published in the journal Nature in November 2022, describes a new method to infer tropical cyclone intensity from ocean currents, which are already being measured by an army of drifters.