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High Relief, Low Relief — Glaciers Do It All

AGU Editors' Vox | 4 June, 2025
Mountain landscapes are as much a product of erosion as they are of uplift. It is certainly true that glaciers can carve uplifted regions, increasing their topographic relief.
Categories: Editors' Highlights; AGU Advances; Earth science; erosion & weathering; geomorphology; glaciers & ice sheets; mountains; Scandinavia;

Creating Animated 3D Objects with MATLAB

Ever since the introduction of electronic devices with touch controls, interactive 3D graphics objects have become increasingly popular in multimedia electronic books (ebooks). The Lidar Toolbox and the Computer Vision Toolbox from MathWorks provide ...
Categories: Home;

New papers on paleoseismology, active tectonics, and archaeoseismology (June 2025)

Paleoseismicity | 4 June, 2025
Today's list of papers includes a large number of publications on the Tibetan Plateau, but earthquake aficionados will also find interesting studies on methodological aspects of earthquake geology and case studies from Europa, the Americas, and Aotearoa / New Zealand. Enjoy reading and let us know if we've missed something!
Categories: Paper; archeoseismology; earthquake; environmental effects; fault; paleoseismology; paper; tsunami;

New NASA budget would shut down 41 space missions

Proposed NASA cuts would cancel dozens of space missions -- including spacecraft already paid for, launched, and making discoveries....
Categories: None

Glacier Collapse Buries Swiss Village

The rock and ice avalanche that overtook Blatten was exceptionally large for the Alps. Read More......
Categories: None

Raton, New Mexico: notes on western railroad towns and urban form

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 3 June, 2025
The decorative streetlights, the hanging planters, the Chamber of Commercial-style tourist banners, the antique stores, the nascent brew pub scene. The old motels, with their seen-better-days charm. The newer motels (but still old), out by the interstate, with U-Hauls in the parking lot and their seen-better-days lack of charm.
Categories: Cities;

NASAL SACS AND CHILLY WATERS: HOODED SEALS

Fossil Huntress | 3 June, 2025
If you frequent the eastern coast of North America north of Maine to the western tip of Europe, along the coast of Norway near Svalbard you may have glimpsed one of their chubby, dark silver-grey and white residents. Hooded seals, Cystophora cri...
Categories: None

A Composer’s Instrumental Ode to the Arctic Circle

State of the Planet | 3 June, 2025
Environmental sound artist Mary Edwards turns field recordings of glacial phenomena in Svalbard into a collaborative musical performance....
Categories: GlacierHub; Arctic; art; Jonathan Kingslake;

Is Your Shampoo Washing Up in Antarctica?

AGU Editors' Vox | 3 June, 2025
Antarctica is Earth's most remote continent, barely touched by human activities.
Categories: News; Antarctica; Earth science; EGU; everything atmospheric; fieldwork; personal care products; pollution; seasonal variability; snow;

Monthly Fern: polypodies & fern sex (or do they?)

Left, Polypodium saximontanum, leaves to 25 cm long (Matt Berger); right, P. virginianum, leaves to 40 cm long.For May, the South Dakota "Monthly Fern" series features polypodies--Polypodium saximontanum and P. virginianum. The genus name comes fr...
Categories: ferns; history of botany; Polypodium; Polypody; South Dakota botany;

A Haze Over North America

Canadian wildfires produced smoke plumes so vast they were visible from deep space and caused hazy skies as far south as Florida. Read More......
Categories: None

Walking With Dinosaurs 2025: Marc’s review

Back in the seemingly long-vanished and quasi-mythical past of...2019, I wrote an article reflecting on the original Walking With Dinosaurs, two decades on from its debut. At the time we were still awaiting an obvious successor; while a number of se...
Categories: TV review; 2025; Albertosaurus; Gastonia; Pachyrhinosaurus; spinosaurus; utahraptor; Walking With Dinosaurs;

Legacy Liabilities for Oil and Gas Wells under the Mineral Leasing Act: New Sabin Center Report

Climate Law Blog | 2 June, 2025
The Sabin Center's newest publication, Legacy Liabilities for Oil and Gas Wells under the Mineral Leasing Act, examines the laws and regulations that allow the Bureau of Land Management ("BLM") to pursue the prior owners and operators of oil and gas wells on federal land for the costs of plugging those wells, removing other infrastructure, and generally "cleaning up" at the end of operations. These costs, which we refer to as "legacy liabilities," are meant to be paid by oil and gas operators but, in recent years, have increasingly fallen on taxpayers as operators have skirted their legal requirements.  Our new report documents the history of legacy liabilities on the BLM-managed land, highlights key gaps in the MLA's legacy liability rules, and recommends reforms to the laws governing well-plugging and other clean-up on federal land.
Categories: Energy; Environment & Land Use; Fossil Fuels; Natural Resources; energy transition; Land Use; Natural Gas; oil and gas; Pollution; Publications;

Forward with Purpose, Determined with Action

From The Prow | 2 June, 2025
We have a promising update regarding the case for which AGU is one of the plaintiffs. In AMERICAN FEDERATION OF GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES, AFL-CIO, et al., v. Donald J. Trump et al., Judge Susan Illston of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California granted the request for a preliminary injunction, which blocks the government from executing any of their reduction-in-force (RIFs) and reorganization plans until the case comes to a full resolution. This order is the largest and most significant setback to the President's authority to reorganize the government without Congressional approval.  
Categories: Public engagement; Science and society; Science policy; advocacy; Leadership; policy; Science and Society;

Trump Withdraws Nomination for NASA Administrator

AGU Editors' Vox | 2 June, 2025
In a move that worried politicians and space scientists alike, President Trump announced on 31 May that he will withdraw his nomination of Jared Isaacman for the position of NASA administrator, according to Semafor. Isaacman's nomination received bipartisan support and he was expected to easily pass a Senate confirmation vote in a few days.
Categories: Research & Developments; culture & policy; NASA; politics; science policy; Space & Planets;

Earth Learning Idea | 2 June, 2025
For the next few weeks, we will be considering geological time. The ELI today is 'The toilet roll of time; make a geological timeline to take home'.
Categories: Geological time;

Colorado River Basin Reservoir Storage: where do we stand?

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 1 June, 2025
Colorado River Basin reservoir storage. Jack Schmidt* and John Fleck** *Center for Colorado River Studies, Utah State University **Utton Transboundary Resources Center, University of New Mexico School of Law 1 June 2025   We now begin June, when the...
Categories: Colorado River; water;

Unforced variations: Jun 2025

RealClimate | 1 June, 2025
This month's open thread. Please stay on climate topics and try to be constructive.
Categories: Climate Science; Open thread; Solutions;

Taking a break - no post this week

Resource Insights | 1 June, 2025
I am taking a break this week and plan to post again on Sunday, June 8....
Categories: None

Meandering Through Baton Rouge

The Mississippi River has shaped the landscape in southeastern Louisiana, supporting agriculture and connecting the region with vital trade and navigation routes. Read More......
Categories: None

Predicted Arctic sea ice trends over time

RealClimate | 31 May, 2025
Over multiple generations of CMIP models Arctic sea ice trend predictions have gone from much too stable to about right. Why?
Categories: Arctic and Antarctic; Climate modelling; Climate Science; Featured Story; Model-Obs Comparisons; Arctic amplification; CMIP3; CMIP5; CMIP6;

A number of really cool open positions in Aotearoa/New Zealand and Germany

Paleoseismicity | 31 May, 2025
The University of Canterbury has an interesting open position in ?tautahi / Christchurch, Aotearoa / New Zealand. Lecturer / Senior Lecturer in Active Tectonics and Geomorphology: https://jobs.canterbury.ac.nz/jobdetails/ajid/wO5F9/Lecturer-Senior-Lecturer-in-Active-Tectonics-and-Geomorphology,26259.
Categories: Jobs; geomorphology; jobs; paleoseismology;

A Different Kind of Deep Time: The 1909 Norton (Kansas) Town Team

This post is about my discovery of a tiny slice of life in this country, dating back to the early 20th century.  This isn't a story about paleontology or even natural history.  Rather, it's about the attraction of exploring and making some sense of a world that seems familiar but which is also distinct in many ways from mine today.  Though not a matter of deep time, it feels a bit like it.  The attraction of this research is quite analogous to what I experience when engaging with paleontology or natural history.  (This is my thin justification for uploading this post.)
Categories: baseball; Kansas; Norton (Kansas); small town life; town team baseball; townball;

A Destructive Glacial Outburst Flood in Peru

Rockfalls overwhelmed one of Vallunaraju's glacial lakes, unleashing a destructive debris flow that struck the city of Huaraz. Read More......
Categories: None

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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