
New York Is Going to Flood. Here’s What the City Can Do to Survive.
Adaptation is a matter of survival, and the city may have to throw every solution available at a worsening situation.
By John Surico and Nick Underwood

Adaptation is a matter of survival, and the city may have to throw every solution available at a worsening situation.
By John Surico and Nick Underwood

Research in the U.S. Southwest could expand lifesaving efforts for hazards that follow wildfires across the globe.
By Austyn Gaffney and Anna Watts

Ashley Tellis, an expert on South Asian affairs, was arrested after the F.B.I. said federal agents found hundreds of pages of sensitive government records at his home in Virginia.
By Mark Walker

A common refrain is that they’re only effective in mild climates. We put that idea to the test.
By Sofia Quaglia

The Great Storm of 1987 was a forecasting blunder that left at least 18 people dead, felled 15 million trees and caused a billion pounds’ worth of damage.
By Nazaneen Ghaffar

The remote village of Kipnuk planned to use the money to protect against flooding. On Sunday, it was inundated.
By Maxine Joselow and Lisa Friedman

Floods and landslides in Mexico killed several dozen people, destroying homes and isolating communities in the central and eastern parts of the country.
By Axel Boada

The three people had been reported missing from Kwigillingok, a low-lying village along the Bering Sea that was hit by remnants of Typhoon Halong.
By Patricia Mazzei and Pooja Salhotra

By the afternoon, forecasters said the fast-moving system was heading out of the region.
By Amy Graff and Jesus Jiménez

Torrential rains set off deadly floods and landslides across five Mexican states, leaving a trail of destruction.
By Emiliano Rodríguez Mega
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