Contribute landslides to a global NASA landslide inventory and help inform decisions that could save lives. This account is managed by Rachel Soobitsky of SSAI.
Citizen scientists are helping NASA expand the global map of landslides! Our new paper details the Cooperative Open Online Landslide Repository (COOLR), its citizen science results from its first year, and the next steps: https://t.co/sus1gseRgA #NASAcitsci#citizenscience
@gautamdoshi11 Hello! We update COOLR with landslide locations/reports as we receive them or map them. There are 2024 events incorporated into COOLR here, which can be downloaded at this link: https://t.co/dSx0Nw22s0
Check out NASA's Earth Day Toolkit (https://t.co/YZYyEQNMit). The toolkit invites anyone looking to host or participate in local Earth Day events to use NASA resources to engage with their audience.
COOLR has been updated! It is now divided into report-based landslide inventories and event-based landslide inventories. To learn about the difference, please see: https://t.co/3sv90QhMZX.
Join @NASA at #AGU23 and share your interdisciplinary solutions to enhance global disaster risk reduction. From harmonized data approaches to AI-powered innovations, let's build a stronger, safer world together.
Submit abstracts by Aug. 2. More info: https://t.co/ont5V7GL5A
Did you know NASA also studies landslides? 🤯
Well they do, and we got the head honcho @DKlandslides on the show today to break it all down!
WATCH or LISTEN at https://t.co/sHK0lcKSKi
The previous version of the "Landslide Susceptibility" layer is now marked "deprecated", along with the previous "Landslide Viewer" web application. After 1 year, we will be removing those items.
Recently, the Landslide Reporter Catalog has not been visible due to technical problems. The service has now been restored; check it out at https://t.co/AQgjFLCX9n.
If you missed our webinar yesterday about how you can contribute to @NASA landslide research using Landslide Reporter, you can watch here: https://t.co/voG9zXKtY9
#CitizenScienceMonth#DoNASAScience
Want to learn how you can help track landslides and contribute to @NASA landslide research?
Join the webinar this Thursday April 28 to learn all about @LandslideReport: https://t.co/gLU2YiFmeE
#CitizenScienceMonth#DoNASAScience
Join us on April 28th to learn more about Landslide Reporter. Find out more information about the event and how to register here: https://t.co/rpMiTJpWYt.
Landslides can be set off by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and human behavior. But one of the most common causes is extreme rainfall—which is why climate change is increasing the danger of the earth slipping from beneath us, @kendrawrites reports:
https://t.co/TxN9wocZ9K
Thanks to Jan Klimeš (@Jan_Klimes) and students from the Czech Academy of Sciences (@Akademie_ved_CR) for translating the “Landslide Identification Training” into Czech: https://t.co/QQtIPyshQl
A scientist on our team, Dr. Pukar Amatya, has published a new rainfall-induced landslide inventory for the Lower Mekong Region. You can access the paper here: https://t.co/vsdiFYpWhz, and the data here: https://t.co/IWh7tnmURo. These points have also been added to COOLR.
We found out today that someone is selling a version of our study on the Cooperative Online Landslide Inventory (COOLR) on Amazon. Just a reminder that the paper is available for free and open access! https://t.co/LbW1WzCxmb
Do you know what causes landslides? Well, 🎶 time makes you bolder and even children get older, 🎶 and we've got a landslide demo for you.
For #NASAatHome, we'll show you how to create a mini-landslide.
https://t.co/FzWdNdDnLe