livescience.com Hikers rambling through Utah’s candy-striped canyons sometimes come across a strange-looking sight. Where the Navajo Sandstone loses its iconic peach, orange and red stripes, hundreds of round, iron-coated stones often litter the ground. READ
My two American geologist friends, with whom I went ziplining amidst some sedimentary rocks a little over a week ago, left on Saturday. Before they left on their evening flight, we decided to go up Cape [...]
Marathon Oil has published a video that illustrates the hydraulic fracturing
dispatch.com Prehistoric life on Earth can seem so strange, with the plants and animals resembling something out of a science-fiction novel about an alien planet. READ
Sunflower selfie (Helianthus annuus).“Selfie” was the Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year in 2013: selfie noun, informal (also selfy; plural selfies): a photograph that one has taken of [...]
On the dog walk today. So neat.
So the story starts like this. The ground is getting soupier and soupier. They're on the edge of a slope and I knew there would be a problem.
Boom!
This [...]
I’m sitting
in the airport in Milan, Italy at the start of my long journey back to
Flagstaff, Arizona*. I’ve had a wonderful week in Torino, Italy at the IAEG2014 Congress, which is held once every 4 years [...]
The Columbia Geology Tour, Part 2: Take a trip back 350 million years to the shallow seas of the Mississippian that covered what is now the U.S. Midwest -- source of the finely crafted limestone columns and [...]
GeoLog-The official blog of the European Geosciences Union [13:30:09]
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We’ve all been there: long hours in the field, a task that seems never ending but which has to be finished today. This week’s Imaggeo on Mondays image is brought to you by Patrick Klenk who highlights the [...]
A series of blog posts on the geology of Santorini and Athens, Greece begins with a look at a sea arch on the south shore of
“Tackling climate change is one of our greatest economic opportunities.” Barack
A few months ago I posted about some Mediospirifer audaculus that I'd finally found fully articulated in the Moscow Formation of New York. Now I have a specimen of the same species from the Silica Shale of [...]
Desde que realizó "Maldita tristeza", su primer fanzine autoeditado en 2002, el dibujante de Deifontes (Granada, España) Juarma López ha llevado por bandera el humor crudo y sin concesiones como forma de [...]
We have good descriptions of the proximal parts of the cervical ribs for lots of sauropods. We also have histological cross-sections of a few, mostly thanks to the work of Nicole Klein and colleagues (Klein et [...]
I’m terrible at remembering anniversaries and worse at communication, so this post commemorating an important anniversary is a day late. Lockwood reminded me that yesterday marked our fourth...
-- Read [...]
The Watershed Hydrology lab will be out in force for the Geological Society of America annual meeting in Vancouver in October. Over the next few days, we’ll be sharing the abstracts of the work we are [...]
We’re in our last week of Expedition 352, and for our scientific ambitions, time is everything –
Will there be time to drill deep enough to [...]
For all the big noses out there, the biggest nose has just arrived. Read more about the recently discovered dinosaur in Utah and its giant nose. Think the nose always knows? Researchers say similar dinosaurs [...]
Members of the MPA in Environmental Science and Policy Class of 2015 joined a group of an estimated 400,000 New Yorkers and people from across the globe as members the People’s Climate March on Sunday, [...]
'Take it or leave it? – the geoconservation debate; when is collecting wrong, and when is it right? – try to decide for yourself'Should you take geological specimens away from the site where they are [...]
If you haven’t seen it yet, and you are at all interested in dams and dam removal (or are even wondering why people would be interested in dam removal), I encourage you to watch the film Damnation. The [...]
This information is going to get outdated quickly. Current status in Bárðarbunga volcano at 14:47 UTC The largest earthquake so far is magnitude 4,8 in Bárðarbunga caldera. There is however continued [...]
video: bohinic (This video demonstrates how the hour indicators are moved in proportion, from equal spacing at the equinoxes, to close spacing on one half and wide spacing on the other as the year approaches [...]
Actually, there is nothing to report. I stayed home this weekend, nursing my cold. The rest of the week looks beautiful, and I'll go to the cottage with the dog again. No earthquakes whatsoever. If we [...]
No-one with an interest in Mesozoic reptiles will have missed the week of controversy following Ibrahim et al.'s (2014) new reconstruction of Spinosaurus. The most important debate has focused on the allegedly [...]
Originally posted on Met Office News Blog:The first half of September has been exceptionally dry across much of the UK and temperatures for many areas have also been well above average, according to [...]
Netzwerk für geowissenschaftliche Öffentlichkeitsarbeit [08:57:34]
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Ergebnisse, Fortschritte und Entwicklung im bundesweiten Vergleich: Wann: 5./6.11.14 Wo:
Fall Gem and Mineral Shows The-Vug.com France Bets on Geothermal Energy New York Times Zhupanovsky Ash Plume NASA Earth Observatory Solar Power in North Carolina Fortune Jadeite Manufacturing Videos and [...]
The fossil appears to be Cyprimeria alta pelecypod fossil. It existed during the Cretaceous Period (about 70 million years ago). This fossil was found in McNairy County, Tennessee (Ripley Formation).
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