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NOAA Advisories |
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NOAA
High Resolution Satellite Images of Storms |
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FUTURE
NOAA SPACECRAFT WILL IMPROVE MANAGEMENT OF AMERICA'S COASTAL
WATERS
Scientists from NOAA, NASA, the Office of Naval Research and
academia are looking to use data from a highly advanced imaging
device—set to go onboard the next generation of Geostationary
Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES-R)—to track
red tides, oil spills, upwelling and other U.S. coastal water
management issues more effectively. The device, called the
Hyperspectral Environment Suite, will be a major imaging instrument
on the GOES-R spacecraft, which is scheduled to launch in
2012. HES will include a capability to image all U.S. coastal
waters and is expected to provide critical data to resource
managers and researchers studying climate, fisheries, coastal
ecology and oceanography.
Full
Story Inside
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NEW
NOAA RESEARCH VESSEL COMPLETES MAIDEN VOYAGE WITH FIVE-WEEK
SURVEY OF NORTHWESTERN HAWAIIAN ISLANDS —
The newly commissioned NOAA research vessel Hi'ialakai completed
its first mission with a successful, comprehensive, five-week
survey of marine ecosystems in the waters of the remote Northwestern
Hawaiian Islands Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve. During the 35-day
cruise, 18 researchers conducted assessments, monitoring and
mapping operations throughout the waters and reefs within the
reserve. |
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News
Story Archive - Home
page stories 1999 - Present |
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CONTEST
TO NAME NOAA'S SHIP FOR OCEAN EXPLORATION;
OCEAN AGENCY PROVIDES DETAILS ON COMPETITION FOR STUDENT TEAMS
— NOAA, in partnership with Coastal America and the National
Environmental Education and Training Foundation, provided details
on a nationwide contest for teams of students to choose a name
for a newly acquired NOAA exploration ship and develop an education
project based on a proposed name. |
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NOAA
Magazine
- The stories behind the headlines.
POMP
AND CIRCUMSTANCE HERALD NEW NOAA MARINE AND AVIATION OPERATIONS
LEADERSHIP |
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NOAA
U.S. WINTER OUTLOOK — NOAA scientists announced
that a number of climate conditions will influence the winter
weather across the United States from December through February.
The NOAA 2004-2005 Winter Outlook calls for above-average temperatures
in Alaska, much of the West and the northern and central Great
Plains. Below average temperatures are expected across the Gulf
Coast states, the Southeast and the mid-Atlantic region of the
U.S. There are equal chances of warmer, cooler or near-normal
temperatures this winter in the Northeast, Midwest and parts
of Southwest. |
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