Morning Overview on MSN
A NASA satellite saw a mega-tsunami behave in a bizarre way
A wall of water taller than most skyscrapers roared through a remote Greenland fjord, yet the strangest part of the story ...
WASHINGTON — A NASA satellite is giving scientists an unprecedented look at bodies of water all over the world. The Surface Water and Ocean Topography satellite, also known as SWOT, is already ...
On 29 July 2025, a powerful magnitude 8.8 earthquake struck the Kuril-Kamchatka subduction zone, generating a Pacific-wide tsunami and providing a rare scientific opportunity for researchers worldwide ...
The most recent breakthrough in human understanding of extreme weather events happened by accident. Tsunami physics has always been difficult to study, both because of their infrequency and the ...
Beyond the rare observation itself, the data raised deeper scientific questions. Large tsunamis are traditionally classified as “non-dispersive,” meaning they are expected to travel as a single, ...
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