On March 27, 1964, the strongest earthquake to hit the United States violently shook southern coast of Alaska. The powerful ...
Earthquake of March 27, 1964 was the largest recorded earthquake in U.S. history and the second largest earthquake recorded ...
Sixty years ago today, March 27, 1964, the second most powerful earthquake on the planet shook Alaska and affected every ...
January 26, 1700, at 9 p.m. Pacific Time marks the moment for one of the largest earthquakes in the continental U.S. The ...
The USGS says a magnitude 1.8 earthquake struck near Ledyard on Thursday morning, and officials in nearby towns reported loud ...
Sixty years ago, a magnitude 9.2 earthquake forced Southcentral to rebuild, driving new seismic engineering and construction methods.
Earthquakes are far from uncommon here in Alaska...but the quake that rocked our state back in 1964 is one no one who was ...
It’s the second such tremor reported in southern Illinois in the last month. A 2.5-scale earthquake shook parts of Perry ...
Ketchikan's quiet Good Friday evening became a cacophony of sirens and alerts, and all residents were ordered to seek higher ground.
Today marks the 60th anniversary of Alaska’s Good Friday Earthquake and Tsunami that destroyed Kodiak’s harbor and downtown.
A 2.2 magnitude earthquake was detected Wednesday night in the Lakes Region, according to the USGS. The U.S. Geological ...
Today my focus is California after the 1964 Alaska earthquake, how our tsunami warning system has changed since then, and preparing for the next tsunami coming from Alaska or elsewhere in the Pacific.