Imaging taking from a radar service show that a slow moving landslide was pushing Rancho Palos Verdes, California 4-inches into the ocean each week.
Parts of the Southern California coastal community of Rancho Palos Verdes were shifting 4 inches closer to the ocean each week in mid-to-late 2024, NASA found.
Rancho Palos Verdes is moving toward the ocean about 80 times faster than it was in 2022, “more than enough to put human life and infrastructure at risk.” ...
An analysis by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory has determined that during a four-week period in fall 2024, land in some ...
New data from NASA shows the land underneath Rancho Palos Verdes slid as much as four inches per week last fall, and that the ...
The land under the Palos Verdes Peninsula has been sliding for decades. New data from NASA shows just how bad the problem is.
Data gathered from four weeks in the fall of 2024 showed the speed of the movement to be "more than enough to put human life ...
The residential area shifted toward the Pacific Ocean as much as 4 inches — per week — during a four-week period last fall.
The Palos Verdes Peninsula is well-known for its landslides, which have been occurring for decades. But radar imagery ...
The residential area shifted toward the Pacific Ocean as much as 4 inches — per week — during a four-week period last fall.
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