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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Avalanches of Microplastics Carry Pollution into the Deep Sea

AGU Editors' Vox | 23 April, 2025
Earth's oceans are full of plastic. Though the state-sized garbage patches formed by ocean currents are the most visible, just an estimated 1% of ocean plastic lurks on the surface. The other 99% hides elsewhere in the ocean and may be found in the deep sea, mixed in with seafloor sediment. These particles are often in the form of microplastics: fragments of plastic goods degraded to less than 1 millimeter in length.
Categories: News; Atlantic Ocean; Earth science; marine debris; ocean circulation; Oceans; plastics; pollution; rivers; seafloor; sediments;

What’s on at EGU25: highlights from the Outreach and Education Committees

EGU Geolog | 23 April, 2025
There are so many great events to participate in at EGU25 this year, in both on-site and virtual formats, that it can be very easy to feel overwhelmed. Whilst we encourage you to make good use of your Personal Programme to help organise your activities, we also reached out to several of EGU's Committees that are responsible for specific other aspects of EGU's activities, including the Outreach Committee and the Education Committee to ask them for their recommendations as to what not to miss during EGU25!
Categories: Education; EGU GA 2025; General Assembly; GIFT; Meet EGU; Outreach; Short Courses; Education Committee; EGU25; geoscience outreach; outreach; Outreach Committee; scicomm; what's on;

The Drumlin Islands of Boston Harbor

A national recreation area and state park protect an archipelago made of glacial debris in eastern Massachusetts.   Read More......
Categories: None

Rio Grande drying in central New Mexico

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 22 April, 2025
Via Laura Paskus: The Middle Rio Grande began drying on April 15, and on Monday more than 18 miles were dry south of Albuquerque. We should expect poor conditions to expand in the coming weeks and months -- and plan accordingly. Historically, the Ri...
Categories: journalism; New Mexico; water;

April Puzzler

Earth Matters | 22 April, 2025
Every month on Earth Matters, we offer a puzzling satellite image. The April 2025 puzzler is shown above. Your challenge is to use the comments section to tell us where it is, what we are looking at, and why it is interesting. How to a...
Categories: EO's Satellite Puzzler;

A New Interactive Tool Models Natural Hazards Fueled by Climate Change

State of the Planet | 22 April, 2025
Columbia Climate scientists launch the first long-term dataset to track and predict the occurrence of climate change-fueled extreme events....
Categories: Climate; Natural Disasters; Chia-Ying Lee; climate modeling; cs impacts; emergency preparedness; Jeffrey Schlegelmilch; Jonathan Sury; National Center for Disaster Preparedness; natural disasters; natural hazards index;

Roger Rosenblatt on the Nature of Aging

 As a writer, Roger Rosenblatt has masterfully fulfilled multiple roles, that of reporter, novelist, memoirist, and, I would add, poet.  His books and essays are remarkable for their grace, insight, and wit.  As he's grown older, he has been reporting back from the land of the aged, mostly recently in an essay in The New York Times titled How to be a Happy 85-Year-Old (Like Me) (April 13, 2025).  The essay's ten observations, rules, pieces of advice - whatever - may or may not make you happy at 85 (or any age), but they certainly better the odds.
Categories: A Matter of Life and Death (movie); aging; Cold Moon; nature; Roger Rosenblatt; Stairway to Heaven (movie);

Knowledge Flows Both Ways at TierraFest 2025

AGU Editors' Vox | 22 April, 2025
After 5 years of organizing TierraFest, an annual event that celebrates the Earth sciences in Mexico, one of the things Raiza Pilatowsky Gruner has learned is that when it comes to communicating knowledge about our environment, "we scientists are not the people with the greatest authority. We all live on this planet."
Categories: News; climate action; Earth Day; Earth science; Education & Careers; Mexico; science communication; STEM education;

EPA Staff Slashed on the Eve of Earth Day

AGU Editors' Vox | 22 April, 2025
On 21 April, the Environmental Protection Agency notified hundreds of employees working on diversity, equity, and inclusion and environmental justice issues that they would be fired or reassigned to other positions.
Categories: Research & Developments; Earth Day; EPA; funding; science policy;

Five Innovative Renewable Energy Projects That Promise a More Sustainable Future

State of the Planet | 22 April, 2025
Take a virtual tour of some remarkable renewable energy projects from around the globe, each showcasing innovative technology, ambitious scale, and a commitment to a cleaner, more sustainable future....
Categories: Energy; carbon capture; climate; Earth Day; explainers; geothermal power; Gernot Wagner; hydroelectric power; interactives; Joshua Murray; Lisa Sachs; maps; Matthew B. Eisenson; renewable energy; Sagatom Saha; solar energy; Sustainability; wind energy;

Quoting Simon Willison

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 22 April, 2025
Work to avoid being somebody who discourages others from sharing their thoughts.
Categories: mind;

Inside a Texas Showdown Over Cities’ Role in Adapting to Climate Change

Climate Law Blog | 22 April, 2025
Texas' Third Court of Appeals will hear arguments tomorrow, April 23, 2025, in a case that cuts to the core of how state and local governments coexist. In Texas v. City of Houston, City of San Antonio, and City of El Paso, a group of Texas cities is challenging one of the most sweeping preemption laws adopted anywhere in the country. That law, the Texas Regulatory Consistency Act (TRCA), gives the state nearly total control over a range of issues, including how cities can protect workers from extreme heat and other impacts of climate change. For local policymakers in Texas, the case will shape the options available to enact innovative measures to adapt to a changing climate.
Categories: Cities & Local Governments; Adaptation; Cities Climate Law Initiative; Extreme Heat; Litigation; Municipal Activity;

Get our top Outstanding Student and PhD-candidate Presentation (OSPP) tips for EGU25, from previous winners and judges!

EGU Geolog | 22 April, 2025
Every year at the General Assembly hundreds of students present their research with a lot of time and effort going into preparing these presentations. With the aim to further improve the overall quality of poster presentations and more importantly, to encourage Early Career Scientists to present their work in the form of a poster, the OSP Awards (as they were formerly known), were born. Since the 2016 General Assembly, PICO presentations have been included in the awards, which have been renamed to Outstanding Student and PhD-candidate Presentation (OSPP) Awards.
Categories: Conferences; Early Career Scientists; EGU; EGU GA 2025; General Assembly; PICO; Posters; Sessions; Awards; early career researchers; EGU General Assembly; EGU25; EGUecs; Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP); poster presentation;

An Artificial Neural Network with Backpropagation in 6 Steps

Artificial neural networks (ANNs) have been used for quite some time to identify, for example, flowers in easy-to-use apps on smartphones. They have been, however, the focus of great attention since the introduction of generative artificial intellige...
Categories: Home;

Mountains Made of Fossils

The peaks in Guadalupe Mountains National Park--some of the highest in Texas--are made of a well-preserved fossil reef formed more than 250 million years ago. Read More......
Categories: None

Remembering Pope Francis’ Climate Leadership 

From The Prow | 21 April, 2025
AGU mourns the passing of Pope Francis. 
Categories: Science and society; Science and Society;

The Monthly Fern: Bracken—dreadful or delightful?

"Shelter" by Colin.Come my sweet and let us lie inSome idyllic wooded glade And let us stay til merry-made Amid the Bracken.For April, the South Dakota fern-a-month series features the world's most widespread fern--Pteridium aquilinum, Bracken (aka...
Categories: Bracken; ferns; Pteridium; South Dakota botany;

NSF Cancels Hundreds of DEI and Disinformation Grants

AGU Editors' Vox | 21 April, 2025
The National Science Foundation has cancelled hundreds of grants to researchers working on projects related to diversity, equity, and inclusion, as well as misinformation and disinformation.
Categories: Research & Developments; funding; NSF; science communication; science policy;

On the Colorado River, doing the accounting with care

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 21 April, 2025
It's easy to take for granted the accounting innovations in the Colorado River governance regime's 2007 guidelines, which have governed river management and the upstream-downstream relationships between the upper and lower basins. "Intentionally Created Surplus" (ICS) is now part of the lexicon, and the idea behind it shows enough promise that it's at the heart of the current negotiations over the post-'07 guidelines management of the river.
Categories: Colorado River; water;

Large Outdoor Gatherings Expose Event-Goers to Severe Weather

AGU Editors' Vox | 21 April, 2025
In 2004, the Indianapolis 500 turned into the Indianapolis 450. Organizers shortened the famous automobile race by 20 laps (50 miles) after a tornado touched down near the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, where more than 200,000 spectators were in attendance. Large outdoor gatherings such as this expose event-goers to the elements, and in some parts of the United States, severe weather can make that pairing deadly.
Categories: News; Earth science; extreme weather; Health & Ecosystems; lightning; meteorology; safety; tornadoes;

EGU25 Photo Competition finalists – who will you vote for?

EGU Geolog | 21 April, 2025
This year's Photo Competition judging panel did a fantastic job of narrowing down the outstanding photo submissions to the EGU's Photo Competition to just 10 finalists!  The finalist photos are listed below and on the Imaggeo website where you can vote for them from Sunday 27 April until Thursday, 1 May 2025 - voting closes at 18:00 CEST.
Categories: Early Career Scientists; EGU GA 2025; General Assembly; Imaggeo; Imaggeo on Mondays; Outreach; Photo Competition; EGU photo competition; EGU Photo Contest; EGU25; Geoscience photography; images; imaggeo photo competition; Imaggeo Photo Contest; landscape; nature; nature photography; outreach; photos; public engagement; vote;

Modelling ancient and modern magnetic fields, using people!

Earth Learning Idea | 21 April, 2025
Our ELI today is 'Human magnets! - modelling ancient and modern magnetic fields, using your pupils'.
Categories: None

North America’s “Galapagos”

The Channel Islands off the coast of southern California support diverse ecosystems, with some plants and animals found nowhere else on the planet. Read More......
Categories: None

From Glacial Lake Craigton to Browns Lake Bog

Wooster Geologists | 20 April, 2025
Last Monday there was a power outage on campus and classes were cancelled, despite this news our afternoon lab period fieldtrip went on as planned. The trip consisted of a field trip led by Nigel Brush (retired from Ashland U. and Wooster). It was a great trip on a beautiful day and we greatly appreciate Dr. Brush's time and willingness to share his expertise of the history of our region. 
Categories: Uncategorized;

Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru 25% Snow Cover Retained 2024

Quelccaya Ice Cap (QIC) is located in the tropical Andes of southeast Peru. Along with Coropuna Ice Cap it is one of two large ice caps in the area. Lamantia et al (2024) observed a 37% decline overall QIC area from 1985-2022, and a 57% decline in snow covered area. They observe snow cover is particularly limited during El Nino events. Here we examine the particularly high snowline and resulting minimum snow cover on QIC in 2024.
Categories: climate change glacier retreat; peru glacier retreat; Climate Change; Featured; global warming; landsat; peru glacier melt; Quelccaya ice cap; tropical peru glaciers;

Latest: No chatbots please, we’re scientists

Latest: New paper! Prediction of anthropogenic debris and its association with geomorphology in US urban streams

Latest: New Paper: an innovative cycle-based learning approach to teaching with analog sandbox models

Latest: Why I went on strike over civil servant pay

Latest: Going underground #1 – flint and brick

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