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Alaska Science Center

The mission of the Alaska Science Center is to provide objective and timely data, information, and research findings about the earth and its flora and fauna to Federal, State, and local resource managers and the public to support sound decisions regarding natural resources, natural hazards, and ecosystems in Alaska and circumpolar regions. We have offices in Anchorage, Juneau, and Fairbanks. 

News

A 700-year rupture sequence of great eastern Aleutian earthquakes from tsunami evidence and modeling

A 700-year rupture sequence of great eastern Aleutian earthquakes from tsunami evidence and modeling

The Threat of Coastal Flooding from Cascadia Earthquake-Driven Land Subsidence

The Threat of Coastal Flooding from Cascadia Earthquake-Driven Land Subsidence

Inaugural USGS Wildlife Health Awareness Day - April 25, 2025

Inaugural USGS Wildlife Health Awareness Day - April 25, 2025

Publications

Marginalizing time in habitat selection and species distribution models improves inference

AimRecent methodological advances for studying how animals move and use space with telemetry data have focused on fine-scale, more mechanistic inference. However, in many cases, researchers and managers remain interested in larger scale questions regarding species distribution and habitat use across study areas, landscapes, or seasonal ranges. Point processes offer a unified framework...
Authors
Joseph Michael Eisaguirre, Layne G. Adams, Bridget Borg, Heather E. Johnson

Using long-term ecological datasets to unravel the impacts of short-term meteorological disturbances on phytoplankton communities

Extreme meteorological events such as storms are increasing in frequency and intensity, but our knowledge of their impacts on aquatic ecosystems and emergent system properties is limited. Understanding the ecological impacts of storms on the dynamics of primary producers remains a challenge that needs to be addressed to assess the vulnerability of freshwater ecosystems to extreme weather...
Authors
V. Tran-Khac, J.P. Doubek, Vijay P. Patil, J.D. Stockwell, R. Adrian, C.-W. Change, G. Dur, A. Lewandowska, J.A. Rusak, N. Salmaso, D. Straile, S.J. Thackeray, P. Venail, R. Bhattacharya, J. Brentrup, R. Bruel, H. Feuchtmayr, M.O. Gessner, H-P. Grossart, B.W. Ibelings, S. Jacquet, S. MacIntyre, S.S. Matsuzaki, E. Nodine, P. Nõges, L.G. Rudstam, F. Soulignac, P. Verburg, P. Znachor, T. Zohary, O. Anneville

Increased flood exposure in the Pacific Northwest following earthquake-driven subsidence and sea-level rise

Climate-driven sea-level rise is increasing the frequency of coastal flooding worldwide, exacerbated locally by factors like land subsidence from groundwater and resource extraction. However, a process rarely considered in future sea-level rise scenarios is sudden (over minutes) land subsidence associated with great (>M8) earthquakes, which can exceed 1 m. Along the Washington, Oregon...
Authors
Tina Dura, William Chilton, David Small, Andra Garner, Andrea D. Hawkes, Diego Melgar, Simon E. Engelhart, Lydia M. Staisch, Robert C. Witter, Alan Nelson, Harvey Kelsey, Jonathan Allan, David S. Bruce, Jessica DePaolis, Mike Priddy, Richard W. Briggs, Robert Weiss, SeanPaul La Selle, Michael J. Willis, Benjamin P. Horton

Science

Alaska Science Center Weekly Findings In-Depth

Descriptions of the full Weekly Findings and links to more information.
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Alaska Science Center Weekly Findings In-Depth

Descriptions of the full Weekly Findings and links to more information.
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Alaska Science Center Weekly Findings

Recent findings by USGS Alaska Science Center staff and their collaborators, updated weekly.
link

Alaska Science Center Weekly Findings

Recent findings by USGS Alaska Science Center staff and their collaborators, updated weekly.
Learn More

Q&A: USGS Ecosystems Science Provides Information on Subsistence and Hunter-Harvested Food Resources in Alaska

The USGS is the science arm of the Department of the Interior with a mission to provide timely and impartial science information to decision-makers, industry, tribal entities and others. In Alaska, subsistence and hunter-harvested foods are kitchen table issues for the public. The annual subsistence harvest per rural resident is 295 pounds of wild food. USGS science is responsive to subsistence...
link

Q&A: USGS Ecosystems Science Provides Information on Subsistence and Hunter-Harvested Food Resources in Alaska

The USGS is the science arm of the Department of the Interior with a mission to provide timely and impartial science information to decision-makers, industry, tribal entities and others. In Alaska, subsistence and hunter-harvested foods are kitchen table issues for the public. The annual subsistence harvest per rural resident is 295 pounds of wild food. USGS science is responsive to subsistence...
Learn More
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