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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

TIKTAALIK, TETRAPODS AND MIGUASHA

Fossil Huntress | 19 February, 2025
Elpistostege watsoniIn the late 1930s, our understanding of the transition of fish to tetrapods -- and the eventual jump to modern vertebrates -- took an unexpected leap forward. The evolutionary a'ha came from a single partial fossil skull found o...
Categories: arctic; bc; canada; fossil; fossils; Heidi; Henderson; huntress; KWAKIUTL; michuasha; miguasha; tetrapods; tiktaalik; Vancouver;

Spring

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 19 February, 2025
BERNARDO, NEW MEXICO - The juniper pollen has cranked up early this year, and the irrigators with groundwater pumps (legal or not, it's hard to know) are firing them up, but the most telling sign of spring was the kettling sandhill cranes this morning.
Categories: birds; New Mexico; water;

River of Fire on Mount Etna

Lava coursed down the snowy slopes of Europe's tallest volcano in February 2025. Read More......
Categories: None

NOAA carries a two century legacy of America’s first government science agency

Southern Fried Science | 19 February, 2025
NOAA, the US government science and management agency in charge of sustainable fisheries, the national weather service, and ocean exploration, is in the crosshairs of the Trump administration and Project 2025. Though criticisms from "small governme...
Categories: Policy; Science; alexander dallas bache; coast and geodetic survey; matthew fontaine maury; national marine fisheries serivce; national weather service; NOAA; spencer baird;

Waiting for Better Weather

Notes from the field | 19 February, 2025
AVUELO has encountered one of the wettest and cloudiest dry seasons in memory. After a series of great acquisitions over core and important areas, our airborne science has stood down for several days with heavy cloud cover. So, what do AVUELO a...
Categories: AVUELO; AVUELO 2025; tropical ecosystems;

Alaska’s Lakes and Ponds Reveal Effects of Permafrost Thaw

AGU Editors' Vox | 19 February, 2025
As climate change warms the Arctic, permafrost is thawing, and carbon trapped within the soil is moving into the atmosphere. Permafrost stores twice as much carbon as the atmosphere, but the degree to which this frozen carbon will thaw and accelerate climate change has remained a point of scientific inquiry. Taking widespread on-the-ground permafrost measurements is not logistically feasible in the remote Far North.
Categories: Research Spotlights; Alaska; Arctic; carbon; climate; Climate Change; Geophysical Research Letters; lakes; permafrost; remote sensing;

Glacier status, recession and change in Nepal

AntarcticGlaciers.org | 19 February, 2025
By Gunjan Silwal, OnePlanet Doctoral Student
Categories: glacier recession; GLOF; Himalaya; Nepal;

Cold Weather Flowers

 Galanthus SnowdropsOur cold weather has ended in northwest Washington. It reached 50 F today with misty rain. Given that I had a water venture via kyak I was glad for the warm up although it was 43 F with light rain when I started out.I noted the a...
Categories: flora;

Standing Together for Science: How to Support the Federal Scientific Workforce

From The Prow | 18 February, 2025
In my last From the Prow post on 14 February, I expressed AGU's alarm regarding the Administration's intent to massively erode the federal scientific workforce.
Categories: Science and society; feature; featured;

Floods Swamp Tennessee

A storm system that swept through the U.S. Southeast brought damaging winds, torrential rain, and destructive flash floods to several communities in the region. Read More......
Categories: None

WOOLLY MAMMOTHS: MASSIVE BEASTS OF ICE AND SNOW

Fossil Huntress | 18 February, 2025
Woolly Mammoths, Mammuthus primigenius,  have always held wonder for me. These massive, hairy -- and likely very smelly beasts -- lived alongside us for a time. If you stood beside him and reached way up, you might be able to touch his tu...
Categories: alaska; america; ate; bering; died; eat; fossil; found; hairy; last; mammoth; mammoths; north; oldest; siberia; steppe; weighed; weight; woolly; wooly;

So Long, and Thanks for All the Leaves

Notes from the field | 18 February, 2025
It's really hard to believe, but I will already be departing Panama tomorrow.  When I arrived a week ago, on February 5, I had a hunch but didn't fully appreciate just how busy our AVUELO ground and airborne teams would be keeping up wit...
Categories: AVUELO;

Seismogenic Liquefaction: The Hidden Impact of Small Earthquakes

Paleoseismicity | 18 February, 2025
New research challenges the assumption that only strong earthquakes cause liquefaction. Scientists from Poland demonstrated that even low-magnitude shocks (~M3.5) can trigger sediment deformation in water-saturated fine-grained sediments. This finding expands our understanding of seismic activity and its effects on geological structures.
Categories: Paper; Uncategorized; earthquake; environmental effects; paper;

Burn it all down

Clarivate is the content-hoarding corporation that owns ProQuest, the Web of Science and EndNote, among many other services widely used in academia. Plus a ton of content. Today's announcement, "Introducing ProQuest Digital Collections, a new library subscription offering unparalleled breadth, value and access", sounds nice, doesn't it? And the first few paragraphs are certainly full of praise for the changes they're making.
Categories: Shiny digital future; stinkin' publishers;

Vintage Dinosaur Art: Dinosaurs (Home Reference Library)

In my further quest to avoid the DK Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs & Prehistoric Life from 2001 (which I do now own, at least), here's another book from around that time - Dinosaurs, published in 2002 by Fog City Press. It's a rather generic affair...
Categories: Vintage Dinosaur Art; eoraptor; Luis Rey; Mark Iley; mononykus; Muttaburrasaurus; Qantassaurus; Saurolophus; Segnosaurus; Steve Kirk; Suchomimus; Tenontosaurus;

Student Writing Competition: Marine Carbon Dioxide Removal Law and Policy

Climate Law Blog | 18 February, 2025
The Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, together with New York Sea Grant, is pleased to announce a writing competition for law students interested in writing on legal and policy issues associated with marine carbon dioxide re...
Categories: Cross-cutting Issues; Negative Emissions; marine carbon dioxide removal; student writing contest;

“the most badass thing we do”

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 18 February, 2025
Pooling our resources to discover new truths about the universe so that we can all have better lives, to strike back against disease, suffering, poverty, and violence, to reduce ignorance for the benefit of all--that's literally the most badass thing we do.
Categories: science;

How Congestion Pricing Will Benefit New York City

State of the Planet | 18 February, 2025
Congestion pricing is already delivering results, but what can New Yorkers expect in the months to come?...
Categories: Urbanization; Viewpoints; air quality; congestion pricing; government; Jacqueline M Klopp; Michael Gerrard; New York City; public transit; traffic; urban development;

Jupiter’s Moon Callisto Is Very Likely an Ocean World

AGU Editors' Vox | 18 February, 2025
More pocked with craters than any other object in our solar system, Jupiter's outermost and second-biggest Galilean moon, Callisto, appears geologically unremarkable. In the 1990s, however, NASA's Galileo spacecraft captured magnetic measurements near Callisto that suggested that its ice shell surface--much like that of Europa, another moon of Jupiter--may encase a salty, liquid water ocean.
Categories: Research Spotlights; AGU Advances; Callisto; Jupiter; moons; Space & Planets; spacecraft; unsolved mysteries;

Uncovering the secrets of samples from a distant asteroid

Earth & Solar System | 18 February, 2025
This post was written by Rhian Jones
Categories: Uncategorized;

Second Thoughts on Lyell

Extinct | 17 February, 2025
Categories: Max Dresow; Problematica;

“Heal the land, Heal the people”: A Conversation About Indigenizing Urban Natural Area Stewardship

The Nature of Cities | 17 February, 2025
Serina Fast Horse and Toby Query met as employees at the City of Portland in 2018 while working on an innovative project that centered Indigenous voices and perspectives. This project, Shwah kuk wetlands (which means frog in Chinuk Wawa, a local indigenous trade language) intertwines Indigenous (or relational) and Western (or linear) worldviews. This conversation ... Continue reading "Heal the land, Heal the people": A Conversation About Indigenizing Urban Natural Area Stewardship ??'
Categories: Essay; North America; People & Communities; Place & Design; Biodiversity; Communities; Culture; Experiencing Nature; Indigenous peoples; Wildlife People Interactions;

Women in Science: Extreme Heat Researcher Casey Ivanovich

State of the Planet | 17 February, 2025
In honor of International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we talk to Ivanovich, who is studying climate extremes and humid heat....
Categories: Climate; Gender Equality; extreme heat; International Day of Women and Girls in Science; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; NASA-GISS; Women in Science;

The Leona Heights Quarry site

Oakland Geology | 17 February, 2025
Students at Merritt College must often wonder about the big expanse of empty land north of the campus -- loosely fenced off, dotted with piles of wood chips, gravel everywhere. Campus old-timers may remember it as rough parking lots. Oakland old-timers recall youthful exploits there in the "Devil's Punchbowl." I'm pretty sure no one alive remembers its days as the Leona Heights rock quarry.* I'm here to celebrate it all.
Categories: Quarries and mines;

How Deep Time Can Help You Handle Modern Times

Rocky Planet | 17 February, 2025
Sometimes last month feels like a long time ago, but considering our planet, the long perspective can really help....
Categories: Planet Earth;

Latest: No chatbots please, we’re scientists

Latest: New paper! Anthropogenic litter and plastics across size classes on a mechanically groomed Great Lakes urban beach

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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