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PMEL Group

Highlights Archive

Dr. Richard Feely on Ecoshock Podcast

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Richard on the dock in front of the NOAA Ship David Starr Jordan.
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Recently retired NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) senior scientist Dr. Richard Feely was featured on a podcast called Ecoshock hosted by Alex Smith. The podcast addresses earth science issues like climate change and ocean...

Raw data to reliable forecasts: PMEL's data management backbone

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Several red and white C-Stars sitting on a vessel as it crosses water past green hills on a clear sunny day
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As the 2025 hurricane season ramps up, NOAA will be testing small, uncrewed instrumented sailboats built by a robotics company to capture weather and ocean data in the path of tropical storms. The observations from these robots will help scientists...

Coastal Weather Buoy Enhancement

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Map of approximate location of the enhanced NDBC 44008 weather buoy, with colorful overlay of analysis of sea surface temperature
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Yellow weather buoy floating on the sea
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On May 9, 2025, a research-enhanced weather buoy was deployed at 40.50°N 69.25°W for an expected observing period of one year. Working alongside a team of engineers and technicians at the National Data Buoy Center (NDBC), Dr. Yolande Serra's (UW...

Why is the North Pacific warming so fast?

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Sea lion pup walking on sandy beach shoreline
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Earth overlaid with monthly sea surface temperature for May 2015
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The North Pacific has warmed significantly faster than any other ocean basin on Earth since 2013, enduring two major marine heat waves in five years that had devastating effects on marine mammals, seabirds, as well as fisheries and the communities...

New research challenges assumptions of what triggered Hunga eruption

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Diagram of the stages of the volcano buildup and explosion
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The extraordinarily powerful eruption of Hunga volcano in the Tongan archipelago in the southern Pacific Ocean on January 15, 2022 blasted gas and ash 36 miles high, generating atmospheric gravity waves, two different types of destructive tsunamis...