News

A new study reveals that all of America’s largest cities are sinking, posing growing risks to buildings, roads, and residents.
Douglas McIntyre, Editor-in-Chief at Climate Crisis 24/7, discusses the growing issue of San Antonio sinking due to the ...
The study finds that some cities are sinking at different rates in different spots, or sinking in some places and rising in others, according to the report.
The new study looked at the 28 most populous cities in the U.S. and 25 of them are experiencing subsidence, or land sinking, each year.
Groundbreaking research from Columbia University reveals that land beneath America’s largest cities is sinking—mostly due to groundwater extraction—posing a hidden but growing threat to infrastructure ...
A new study reveals that uneven land subsidence could impact 29,000 buildings across the America's most populated ...
As we approach integration on September 1, the Integration Steering Committee (ISC) continues to work diligently to ensure ...
A new study using recent satellite data finds that all cities in the United States with populations of more than 600,000 are ...
The movement is slow — sinking on the scale of millimeters per year in the United States — but the effects accumulate over ...
A new study of the 28 most populous U.S. cities finds that all are sinking to one degree or another. The cities include not just those on the coasts, where relative sea level is a concern, but many in ...
In a nutshell 34 million Americans live on sinking land across the 28 most populous U.S. cities, including unexpected inland ...