Geobulletin alpha
News from the Geoblogosphere
New from Snet: Lithologs, a new tool to create lithological/sedimentological logs online..
Wednesday, 17 May 2017
Una año más Somosaguas-Norte ha acogido a los estudiantes de la asignatura de "Paleontología General" (hoy el grupo A) para la realización de un práctica de excavación en un yacimiento cenozoico real. No hay muchas universidades del mundo que puedan decir que entre sus bondades se encuentra el disponer de un yacimiento paleontológico dentro de su propio campus, y menos aún las que disfrutan
One takes their chance when deciding to visit Yosemite Valley in the springtime. The storms of winter are never quite done by then, and you may find yourself in a valley full of clouds. That's where I found myself a week back, touring the Yosemite region with my students. It had been two weeks of no precipitation, but on Saturday, the storms came back for a day.
Sentinel Falls (left)
Tiled map layers are an important part of the digital mapping stack, since Google and others introduced their slippy maps quite some time ago. There’s a huge ecosystem of (open source) software for creating [...]
In the spirit of my "So you're going camping for the first time" post - which came about as a result of a Twitter conversation about racial and economic barriers to outdoor experiences - here's a collection [...]
GeoLog-The official blog of the European Geosciences Union [17:05:58]
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While at this year’s General Assembly in Vienna, Keri McNamara, one of the EGU’s press assistants, spoke to a number of female geoscientists (at different career stages), to get their perspective on what [...]
A Capella Science es un proyecto del físico canadiense Tim Blais en el que aúna su pasión por la ciencia con el interés que siempre ha despertado la música en él. Así, inspirado en Weird Al Yankovic, [...]
AKI Press has uploaded a new video to Youtube showing the extremely large Kurbu-Tash landslide in Kyrgyzstan, which has destroyed nearly 60
Chapel Hill, NC – Ben Kumpf (’18) and I are at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to use their lab facilities for isotope analysis. We’re working with small amounts of sample and the [...]
For the past month (or so) there has been a constant earthquake activity close to Flatey island on the Tjörnes Fracture Zone (TFZ). This earthquake swarm has not been strong, with majority of the earthquakes [...]
A new study from researchers at UCLA and the University of Houston reveals estimates of significant groundwater loss in California’s Central Valley during the recent drought and sparks questions of [...]
The results of the National Schools Geology Challenge final quiz round! Continue reading →
In the previous post of the Dinos in Pop Culture - Animal Kingdom: Part 1, we looked at the dinosaurs in Animal Kingdom that were outside of the part of the park called DinoLand U.S.A.. Today we are going into [...]
“Dinosaurs have intentionally been left out of this book to give some attention to less popular – but still fascinating – creatures that once lived on this planet.”
Thus begins Maja Säfström’s [...]
Been on many trips and writing from Waikiki where my sister will be married on Wednesday. However, here is a second installment from my first river trip in Grand Canyon in April of this year.One of the most [...]
Yesterday the re-entry camera was coming up from the bottom of the ocean and it caught footage of a Dumbo octopus Grimpoteuthis sp.. These unique [...]
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