NOAA's 10‑foot map visualizes cities at risk. New research flags thousands of hazardous sites vulnerable by 2100.
A 10-foot sea level rise would leave a significant number of U.S. coastal cities "uninhabitable," J. Derek Loftis told Newsweek.
Along California’s 1,000‑mile shoreline, a new generation of maps is turning an abstract climate threat into something ...
For some in New Jersey, sea level rise is never far from the mind. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration provides readers an interactive tool to see what future rising temperatures could ...
What would Lake Como's shoreline look like under three feet of water? What will the Manasquan Inlet Coast Guard station look like in the future with sea level rise? Maps from the National Oceanic and ...
As sea levels rise, nothing along the coastline is safe. Not even parking lots. Or bathrooms. Eventually, the rising tide will consume more than just sand. Two professors from Cal State University ...
This sea level rise "would severely disrupt the essential facilities that communities depend on," Shangjia Dong told Newsweek ...
A vast number of coastal cities in the U.S. would be submerged in water if sea levels rise 10 feet, according to a map by ...