Posts treating: "Denmark"
Thursday, 02 June 2016
Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog [2016-06-02 19:23:40]
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(126 visits) DK,IS
Keeping this website running costs money and keeping my self a float costs money. Currently I am preparing to search for a job in Denmark in order to resolve this money issue for good, but that is going … Continue reading
Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog [2016-05-13 00:31:35]
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(198 visits) DK,IS
This is going to be a little compressed article. Since I’m currently in Iceland. I’ll be back in Denmark on 18-May. No GVP links now. I don’t think that my laptop can handle it (its slowly turning into … Continue reading
Iceland Volcano and Earthquake blog [2016-05-01 23:17:56]
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(158 visits) DK,IS
When I flew to Denmark on 14th of April the weather was mostly clear skies over Iceland. This allowed me to take pictures of few of the volcanoes in the flight path I was going. Due to constrains … Continue reading
Since I’m moving back to Denmark I’m going to be without any internet connection in the days between 15th to 29th of April. I might have some limited internet connection during that time, but nothing that I can … Continue reading
Before I start. I want to remind people on this article here that I wrote about my move to Denmark. Today (3-April-2016) magnitude 3,4 earthquake took place in Bárðarbunga volcano. It was followed by few minor aftershocks. Pre-earthquake … Continue reading
I’m currently in the process of moving to Denmark. My plan is mostly going as I thought it would do. With one minor exception, I’m having less money then I expected due to the computer failure I had … Continue reading
Flo looks two examples of the strange and important ways that geology and where it’s located can affect international governance and regulation. From the presence of tiny coralline islands to ownership of the Arctic! I’ve always had an interest in the peculiarities of geology and geomorphology and the inordinate (sometimes almost absurd!) ways that they play their part in deciding on big international governance. Humanity has long-relied on the presence of geological features such [...]
WeBlog Aragosaurus [2014-09-24 10:54:00]
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(169 visits) Quaternary; DK,US,GL,
Postdoctoral Position in Marine Micropalaeontology at the Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, (ID 688420)The Centre for Past Climate Studies at the Department of Geoscience at the Aarhus University, Denmark, invites applications for a position in marine micropalaeontology at the postdoctoral level. The successful candidate will be part of a research group studying late Quaternary and Holocene palaeoclimate and palaeoceanography of the larger North Atlantic region. He/she will partake [...]
Buttons to celebrate 200.Anna and Jim celebrate the hard-won move in to the Indiana Convention Center.Me, Anna, and driver Jim Nation on the way to Indianapolis, Indiana and ASEE. Great company! Bad news: this blog has been neglected. Good news is we’ve been too busy to write about all the cool things LRRD’s doing.We have a waiting list now on our Em2 models; they are selling faster than we can build them.The first production Emflume1 units are finished; this was a huge [...]
Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week [2014-06-10 21:33:17]
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(101 visits) DK
In a couple of weeks (in the early afternoon of 25 June), I’ll be speaking at ESOF 2014 (the EuroScience Open Forum) in Copenhagen, Denmark. The session I’m part of is entitled “Should science always be open?“, and the irony is not lost on me that, as that page says, “You must be registered and
At the moment the webicorders are not updating due to a hardware failure in my apartment in Denmark. I am not sure what has failed, but it appears as my wan router has failed. How it has failed … Continue reading
“The Alum Shale in Denmark contains an estimated mean of 6.9 trillion cubic feet of undiscovered, technically recoverable natural gas, according to a new report by the U.S. Geological Survey. This estimate comes from the first-ever USGS assessment of shale gas resources in Denmark.” Quoted from the USGS press
I have updated my webicorder website. I have added two new geophones from New Zealand to the website “Other webicorder networks”. I have moved the geophone in Denmark to it’s own website, it makes it easier to view … Continue reading
We kindly invite PhD students to attend an ELITE course in Tectonics.
A team of geologists from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) in Copenhagen, Cardiff University in Wales, Lund University in Sweden and the Institute of Planetary Science in Moscow has found the remains of a giant asteroid impact crater in Western Greenland that is over 3 billion years old! Preliminary size estimates of the impacting meteorite at Maniitsoq suggest it may have had a diameter of approximately 30 km resulting in an impact crater of somewhere around 500-600 km. If [...]
I've featured the genus Echinocorys before from both France and Denmark. Below is a specimen of Echinocorys vulgaris from Spain that comes from the Navarro-Cantabrian Basin in northern Spain.Thank you to my friend Jenaro for this fossil. The rocks of the Navarro-Cantabrian Basin are dated to the Santonian stage of the
Today there has been a large thunderstorm in Denmark, the largest one yet that I have seen so far since I started living here. Currently over 10.000 lightnings have been recorded from all over Denmark when this is … Continue reading
As always I need donations to keep up running in March. My financial issues are improving. Mostly because my debt in Denmark is dropping at rather fast rate. The problem however is that my debt in Iceland is increasing instead. … Continue reading
Photo and caption by Johannes BojesenThe sheep had drowned while trying to cross a small canal in the meadow-swamp 'Tøndermasken' in southern Jylland in Denmark. Birds had eaten every part above the surface and everything under was left totally untouched. Photo location: Tøndermarsken, Tønder, Denmark.
From the 2012 National Geographic Photo
Today (18.09.2012) at small earthquake swarm started in northern Denanmark, with the fault line extending upwards Sweden. The reason for earthquakes in this area is old fault lines. Along with the fact the Alps pressure the crust in Denmark (from … Continue reading