The NOAAWatch Web site is a Web portal offering information about
ongoing environmental events, and explains the role of NOAA in
prediction, monitoring, and recovery from environmental hazards.
It provides public access to current information on a number of
environmental threats ranging from oil spills, to hurricanes and
tsunamis, to space weather.
NOAAWatch consists of a few permanent features such as the present
weather outlook and warnings, satellite image of the day, educational
pages, and a link to the NOAA Weather Radio. The site's main feature
is the listing of detailed, current information on high-risk hazards
as they occur.
Overview pages describing NOAA's roles in environmental hazrds are available for Tropical Weather (hurricanes), Fire Weather,
Tsunamis, Severe Weather, Flooding, Droughts, Volcanoes, Earthquakes,
Harmful Algal Blooms(HABs), Coral Bleaching, Oil Spills, Rip Currents,
and Air Quality, Excessive Heat, and Space Weather
NOAAWatch integrates NOAA data, products, observations, satellite
images, and other information pertaining to environmental hazards. It pulls
many of NOAA's Web offerings together so that web visitors can get all
NOAA information related to a storm or event on one site.
The NOAAWatch Web site became a "live" site on the first day of
the 2006 hurricane season - June 1, 2006
Use of Data and Products
The information on government servers are in the public domain, unless specifically annotated otherwise, and may be used freely by the public so long as you do not 1) claim it is your own (e.g. by claiming copyright for NOAA information -- see below), 2) use it in a manner that implies an endorsement or affiliation with NOAA, or 3) modify it in content and then present it as official government material. Attribution of data and images to NOAA, or other originating agency, is requested.
You also cannot present information of your own in a way that makes it appear to be official government information.
Before using information obtained from this server special attention should be given to the date & time of the data and products being displayed.
The user assumes the entire risk related to its use of this data. NOAA is providing this data "as is," and disclaims any and all warranties, whether express or implied, including (without limitation) any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. In no event will NOAA be liable to you or to any third party for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, special or exemplary damages or lost profit resulting from any use or misuse of this data.
As required by 17 U.S.C. 403, third parties producing copyrighted works consisting predominantly of the material appearing in NOAA Web pages must provide notice with such work(s) identifying the NOAA material incorporated and stating that such material is not subject to copyright protection.
For data provided by other Government agencies (USGS, FEMA, DHS, EPA, etc), please refer to Use of Data and Service notices and linking policies on their pages.Can I link to your site? Can you add a link to my site?
While you are free to link from your site to NOAAWatch, we do not participate in "link exchanges" nor do we add links that are not directly related to the primary mission of the NOAA site (i.e., directly related to NOAA's role in the protection of life, property, and environment).
For links to sites outside of the control of the Federal government (including all .com, .net, .biz, and .edu domains and state and local government sites), the information or data must not be available from other Federal Internet sources. In addition, the links to non-Federal sites must meet all of the following criteria 1) links are necessary for and material to the presentation of agency information or the delivery of services in the proper performance of an agency function, and; 2) reasonable steps are taken to ensure the presentation is accurate, relevant, timely, and complete, and; 3) reasonable steps are taken to assure that links remain active or otherwise continue to provide the level of quality (including objectivity, utility, and integrity) as intended by the agency and expected by users.
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