FLIGHT ADVISORY – GPS Interference Testing – Marine Corps Air Station, AZ
FLIGHT ADVISORY GPS INTERFERENCE TESTING MARINE CORPS AIR STATION ARIZONA (MCASAZ) 25-01 05 – 17 April Marine Corps Air Station, AZ Centered at 323524N1140842W the BZA101025 The entire flight advisory may be accessed and downloaded at the following address: https://www.faasafety.gov/files/notices/2025/Apr/MCASAZ_25-01_GPS_Flight_Advisory.pdf Pilots are advised to check NOTAMs frequently for possible changes prior to operations in the area. NOTAMs will be published at least 24 hours in advance of any GPS tests.
Federal Emergency Management Agency to Host Public Meeting On Preliminary Observations of the Palo Verde Generating Station Exercise
Federal Emergency Management Agency to Host Public Meeting On Preliminary Observations of the Palo Verde Generating Station Exercise OAKLAND, Calif. – The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Region 9 National Preparedness Division, Technological Hazards Branch announced that a public meeting will be held on March 7, 2025 in Buckeye, Arizona. The public meeting will present FEMA’s and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s (NRC) preliminary evaluation observations on the performance of the state of Arizona, and the county of Maricopa, during a Plume and Post-Plume Phase exercise. The full-scale exercise is conducted at Palo Verde Generating Station (PVGS), and at State
FLIGHT ADVISORY – Marine Corps Air Station, AZ
FLIGHT ADVISORY GPS INTERFERENCE TESTING MARINE CORPS AIR STATION ARIZONA (MCASAZ) 24-03 17 – 20 December Marine Corps Air Station, AZ The entire flight advisory may be accessed and downloaded at the following address: https://www.faasafety.gov/files/notices/2024/Dec/MCASAZ_24-03_GPS_Flight_Advisory_.pdf Pilots are advised to check NOTAMs frequently for possible changes prior to operations in the area. NOTAMs will be published at least 24 hours in advance of this event.
USGS deploys “aftershock kits” to study Whitehouse Station earthquakes
The team is deploying five “aftershock kits” this week, which will gather information such as where aftershocks originate in the area, how long they last, and their magnitude, said Greg Tanner, a USGS electronics technician assigned to the USGS’s Albuquerque Seismological Laboratory, who is on the team installing kits. This effort is being performed in cooperation with partners at the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University, the Texas Seismological Network at the University of Texas at Austin, Rutgers University, and Yale University, that are also deploying seismic sensors. Aftershocks are smaller earthquakes that occur in the same general area