The USGS has revealed than around 71 to 95 million Americans may rely on groundwater supplies with detectable levels of PFAS.
Many people in the U.S. may be drinking water with "forever chemicals" in it, according to a  U.S Geological Survey ...
The discovery of a new fault line may explain the unusually strong and displaced shaking from April’s magnitude 4.8 quake ...
Lithium is often referred to as the "white gold" of the energy transition—or, as the USGS put it, "hidden treasure"—because of its crucial role in battery technology that will drive the green ...
A new method provides highly accurate continental-scale landslide susceptibility maps that are being used in the aftermath of ...
Delaware Geological Survey's David Wunsch reflects on geological career, impact of UD and DGS on the First State ...
Residents around Las Vegas may have felt a small overnight shake after a 4.7 magnitude earthquake was detected in Stovepipe ...
The temblor was 32 miles south-southwest of Dana Point, 32.5 miles from San Clemente, and 34.9 miles from Laguna Beach, ...
What if the U.S. Geological Survey said there’s enough lithium beneath Arkansas to meet the global demand for car batteries ...
The amount of lithium that could be extracted from south Arkansas brine might be more than enough to meet global demand.
Last week, teams from the Geological Survey of India visited the protected fossil site to help pitch it as a UNESCO ...
A few days ago, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) announced the results of a study that using a combination of water ...