Natural disasters

An exceptionally strong El Niño may have caused 1876-1878 famine that killed tens of millions.
Charles Q. Choi, Contributor
Tethered balloons equipped with sophisticated cameras can survey threats and damage from an elevated perspective.
Peter Gwynne, Contributor
Scientists can now link "acts of God" to climate change. That could give victims the power to hold someone accountable, say lawyers.
Nala Rogers, Staff Writer
How the role of social media can save lives.
Emilie Lorditch, Staff Writer
A former storm chaser recounts being in the path of a tornado.
Emilie Lorditch, Staff Writer
Nasty weather can make map apps unreliable.
Joel Shurkin, Contributor
A panel of researchers discussed the need for a system to warn the public about health risks from wildfire smoke, similar to the National Weather Service's heat advisory.
Emilie Lorditch, Staff Writer
Could this repeated signal be new tool for predicting earthquakes from volcanic activity?
Emilie Lorditch, Staff Writer
Alterations in the rock formations' growth in Indiana cave could provide clues about past earthquakes in the Midwest.
Emily DeMarco, Staff Writer
An undergraduate college student may have found a way to warn people up to 30 minutes in advance that a tornado is on the way.
Karin Heineman, ISTV Executive Producer
Misconceptions and false information dominated with 185,000 tweets during big storm.
Jason Socrates Bardi, Editor
A new warning system gives the public more advance notice of storm surge threats.
Marsha Lewis, Contributing Producer