The land under the Palos Verdes Peninsula has been sliding for decades. New data from NASA shows just how bad the problem is.
Data gathered from four weeks in the fall of 2024 showed the speed of the movement to be "more than enough to put human life ...
The Palos Verdes Peninsula in Los Angeles County continues to inch toward the ocean posing danger to life and infrastructure, ...
The Palos Verdes Peninsula is well-known for its landslides, which have been occurring for decades. But radar imagery ...
An analysis by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory has determined that during a four-week period in fall 2024, land in some ...
Residents of Rancho Palos Verdes brace for an incoming storm, fearing heavy rainfall could accelerate ongoing land movement despite stabilization efforts.
The peninsula is home to Rancho Palos Verdes, which faced sweeping power shutoffs last year due to land movement.
The Palos Verdes Peninsula, a Los Angeles County area ... white solid lines representing the boundaries of the active landslide area defined by the California Geological Survey in 2007.
The affected area on the Palos Verdes Peninsula is part of a decades-long, slow-moving landslide, and the deluge of rainfall from storms in 2023 and 2024 significantly accelerated land movement.
New data from NASA shows the land underneath Rancho Palos Verdes slid as much as four inches per week last fall, and that the area of the slides is spreading.
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory has identified a slow-moving landslide on the Palos Verdes Peninsula in Southern California, ...