NOAA has been bringing science to life for 50 years.

Cover to NOAA at 50 story map. (Image credit: NOAA)
It is NOAA's 50th Birthday!!
NOAA was founded in 1970, and after five decades we head into the future as an innovative force, changing the way the world is viewed, serving as a vital pillar of U.S. economic growth and competitiveness, and enhancing the safety and the well-being of everyone in our Nation.

Of course, NOAA's culture and core values of science, service and stewardship took root well before 1970. We trace our lineage to 1807, when Thomas Jefferson established the Survey of the Coast, America’s first scientific agency. Over the last 50 years, NOAA's dedicated workforce has built upon the foundations of the Survey of the Coast and our other trailblazing legacy agencies, showing the value of bringing them together into a single agency.
As NOAA celebrates its 50th anniversary, we continue to pursue new scientific frontiers that stretch from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, advancing President Jefferson’s vision of a world where science and innovation flourish and serve the public good.
I hope you enjoy this story map, which celebrates our heritage of science and service and shows how it shaped some of our recent achievements.
Happy 50th, NOAA!

Building a Weather-Ready Nation



Doppler's revolutionary effect


Understanding Earth from space

World-class computing


Curious robots map coastal waters



Navigating safely, efficiently & competitively

Along with NOAA’s nautical charts, NOAA’s PORTS® data are critical to mariners who must move cargo safely, cost-effectively and competitively while protecting natural resources. PORTS® serves nearly one-third of U.S. major ports, which generate more than $4 trillion annually.
This cargo ship, for example, needed to transport very tall, wide cranes up the Chesapeake Bay to the Port of Baltimore. Weeks in advance, PORTS® tide and current predictions identified the ideal transit window. Days before transit, coastal forecasts showed that local conditions would not change water depth enough to affect bridge clearance. Right before reaching the bridge, real-time information ensured the ship would fit.
For safe navigation, PORTS® data is combined with information on NOAA's Electronic Navigational Charts, which are essential to both commerce and recreational boaters. The charts are updated weekly. Click on this “viewer” to see how NOAA continuously depicts coverage over U.S. coastal waters and the Great Lakes.
America's marine treasures

National Marine Sanctuaries and a marine national monument teem with life. Thousands of species have safe habitat, coral reefs and giant kelp forests flourish, whales and sharks migrate safely, and wilderness beaches can stretch for miles. The protected sites are research labs, magical classrooms and where divers give new life to historic shipwrecks and other deep archaeological sites.
From the first sanctuary covering just one square mile, the 15-site network now protects nearly 622,000 square miles of marine and Great Lakes waters. As the first preserve, the Monitor National Marine Sanctuary, located off North Carolina’s coast, was designed in 1975. It’s the burial site of the USS Monitor, a famous shipwreck in U.S. history. Sunk in 1862, the turreted warship was discovered on the ocean floor more than a century later. The distinct turret and other artifacts have since been recovered and preserved.
Explore a map of the magical sanctuary network offsite link. Dive in.
Positioning our nation's future


Smart sampling at NOAA fisheries



Dynamic advances in global forecasting
The Global Forecast System, NOAA’s flagship weather model, has been upgraded with a dynamical new core, an “engine” called FV3 that will improve forecast accuracy for severe weather, winter storms and tropical cyclone track and intensity. The upgrade will enable future advances in higher resolution and data quality control, among others.
Precipitation Forecast for Heavy Rain on West Coast, March 2018

NOAA Corps: In command on land, sea and in the air



Collaborating across NOAA

From developing high tech global weather models to innovating machine vision that accurately and efficiently samples fish, NOAA's mission is sweeping and complex. Many of the complexities that drive this mission are place-based, requiring interdisciplinary approaches and regionally-tailored solutions that hit home where people live and work.
To provide the rich insights that spur action, NOAA’s Regional Collaboration Network was formed in 2010. By engaging and connecting people and resources within and across regions, the network’s more than 165 NOAA staff and partners help push the boundaries of NOAA science, service and stewardship to both support the kinds of advances highlighted in this story map and achieve important new ones.

Here's a sampling of 2019 accomplishments:
- Produced 5-to-1 economic gains in Great Lakes restoration
- Reduced shellfish poisoning risks in the Arctic
- Improved disaster resilience in the Southeast and Caribbean
- Tested emergency response in the West
- Bolstered fisheries management in the North Atlantic
- Improved water quality throughout the Central region’s Mississippi River watershed
- Strengthened preparedness and response in the Pacific Islands
- Facilitated data-sharing in the Gulf of Mexico, leading to better forecasting after tropical cyclones and, over time, faster FEMA claims adjustments at lower cost
Read more about regional initiatives in the Regional Collaboration Network’s 2019 Accomplishments Report offsite link
"The Survey of the Coast was born on the spirit and necessities of 1807 and grew as the nation grew ... No doubt it would have been a point of pride with Jefferson to have played a part in the establishment of what is considered today the oldest scientific agency in the U.S. government."
– Thomas Jefferson Foundation
To view the original NOAA story map, please see this version on the ESRI website offsite link.