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Geometric Connections in Puglia

The Italian region displays a network of lines--and one nearly perfect circle--that connect inland settlements and agricultural areas with the bustling Adriatic coast. Read More....
Categories: None

Stuff I’m reading

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 22 March, 2025
In sorting out the implications of how the federal chaos is playing out in real, on-the-ground effects on things I think about as a New Mexican and westerner, there are a a few independent writers who I am finding invaluable right now.
Categories: journalism;

Floating Solar in Madhya Pradesh

Buoyant photovoltaic systems, also called floatovoltaics, have been deployed across a reservoir in central India. Read More......
Categories: None

Wrecking ball report: Weather balloon launches

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 21 March, 2025
Public goods, as my economist friends like to point out, are under provided.
Categories: climate variability;

"The great heart of nature beats"

Extinct | 21 March, 2025
Categories: Max Dresow; Problematica;

ANCIENT SEA MONSTERS: ICHTHYOSAURS AND MOSASAURS

Fossil Huntress | 21 March, 2025
When we think of prehistoric creatures, dinosaurs usually steal the spotlight. But beneath the ancient waves swam giants just as awe-inspiring--and sometimes even more terrifying. Among these marine reptiles, two groups stand out: ichthyosaurs ...
Categories: a; archea; Blog; cretaceous; female; fight; fossil; fossilhuntress; huntress; ichthyosaur; in; mosasaur; paleontologist; paleontology; who; win; woman; would;

Whole new (or newly discovered) worlds

Planetary Society Weblog | 21 March, 2025
More planets and moons are being discovered all the time. It's up to us to explore them....
Categories: None

China Authorizes Controversial Hydropower Project in Landslide-Prone Region of Tibet

State of the Planet | 21 March, 2025
Recent Chinese approval to construct the world's largest hydropower dam in Tibet has sparked concerns on local displacement, downstream impacts and infrastructure longevity....
Categories: GlacierHub; Peace and Conflict; glaciers; human migration; hydropower; India; landslides; Tibet; Water Conflict;

Using Algorithms to Help Find Life on Icy Ocean Worlds

AGU Editors' Vox | 21 March, 2025
Scientists have long thought that our solar system's ocean worlds, such as Jupiter's moon Europa and Saturn's moon Enceladus, may harbor extraterrestrial life in the form of microbes. But detecting it could be a challenge because missions to ocean worlds have relied on probes, not landers. Probes pass only through a planet's or moon's atmosphere, kilometers away from the surface and interior. Spacecraft such as Europa Clipper (like Cassini before it) stay even farther away, not even entering the moon's exosphere.
Categories: Research Spotlights; bacteria & microbes; biogeochemistry; Enceladus; Europa; life as we know it; machine learning & AI; ocean worlds; Space & Planets; spectroscopy;

Sarakiniko: A unique geoheritage site under threat

EGU Geolog | 21 March, 2025
Sarakiniko, a stunning geological landmark on the aegean island of Milos, Greece, is under imminent threat. Known for its breath-taking white tuff formations built by the deposition of submarine volcanic eruptions and sculpted by wind and water over millions of years, this site serves as both a natural laboratory for geoscience and planetary research and a worldwide significant geoheritage site. However, recent construction of a large-scale hotel and plans for expansion to multiple constructions in the near future within Sarakiniko is causing irreversible damage, jeopardizing not only its aesthetic and cultural value but also its scientific importance.
Categories: Geochemistry, Mineralogy, Petrology & Volcanology; geology; Sarakiniko; Volcanic education; Volcanic tuff; volcano;

World Day For Glaciers March 3 2025

March 21, 2025, the "World Day for Glaciers", is part of the UN International Year for Glaciers' Preservation." Rapid and accelerating glacier loss this century led to this day. In 2023 and 2024 for the first time all 58-reporting Global Reference glaciers had a negative mass balance. Acceleration of glacier's disappearing led to creation of an extinct glacier data layer in GLIMS global glacier inventory. 
Categories: Glacier Observations;

MATLAB vs. PYTHON from a MATLABer’s Perspective

After writing a ~500 pages book in two versions for MATLAB and Python, I would like to offer a comparison from the point of view of a MATLAB user. Comments, corrections and additions via email are as always welcome! This is a comparison of MATLAB vs....
Categories: Home;

Low Ice in the Gulf of St. Lawrence

The body of water off eastern Canada is one of the southernmost locations where Arctic sea ice forms, but its extent in winter 2024-2025 was well below normal. Read More......
Categories: None

WMO: Update on 2023/4 Anomalies

RealClimate | 20 March, 2025
The WMO released its (now) annual state of the climate report this week. As well as the (now) standard set of graphs related to increasing greenhouse gas concentrations, rising temperatures, reducing glacier mass, etc., Zeke Hausfather and I wrote up a short synthesis on the contributions to recent temperature anomalies.
Categories: Aerosols; Climate modelling; Climate Science; El Nino; Featured Story; Instrumental Record; 2023; 2024;

Wrecking ball report: blowing up 25 years of productive US-Mexico collaboration on the Colorado River

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 20 March, 2025
Via Annie Snider at Politico: The Trump administration escalated a water fight with Mexico on Thursday, saying it will cut off Colorado River water deliveries to the city of Tijuana. In a post on X, the State Department's Bureau of Western Hemisphe...
Categories: Colorado River; water;

MEET UNESCOCERATOPS KOPPELHUSAE

Fossil Huntress | 20 March, 2025
Unescoceratops koppelhusae, Julius CsotonyiA very sweet small leptoceratopsid dinosaur, Unescoceratops koppelhusae -- a new species in the collections of the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Drumheller, Alberta.The colourful and beautif...
Categories: alberta; britsh; canada; columbia; courtenay; csotonyi; dinosaurs; facts; julius; museum; of; tyrrell; unesco;

Hiring Freezes, Rescinded Funding, Cancelled Programs: How Federal Funding Cuts Are Affecting Universities

AGU Editors' Vox | 20 March, 2025
Universities across the United States are feeling the effects from a wave of policies the Trump administration and its Department of Government Efficiency say are aimed at making the government more productive.
Categories: Research & Developments; Education & Careers; STEM education;

5th Palaeontological Virtual Congress: a bony lesion in an apatosaur femur

Here's a short post on another 5PVC presentation: Raber et al. (2025) on a musculoskeletal lesion in an apatosaur femur.
Categories: 5th Palaeo Virtual Congress; Apatosaurus; conferences; diplodocids; femur; museums; paleopathology; stinkin' appendicular elements; stinkin' mammals; Utah Field House of Natural History;

French Scientist, En Route to Conference, Denied U.S. Entry for Trump-Critical Messages

AGU Editors' Vox | 20 March, 2025
On 9 March, a French researcher traveling to a science conference near Houston, Texas, was denied entry to the United States and expelled back to France. The scientist, on assignment for France's National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), was allegedly pulled aside for a random security check. U.S. authorities said they found private messages on the scientist's devices expressing a personal criticism of the Trump administration's treatment of scientists and scientific research.
Categories: Research & Developments; culture & policy; France; politics; Space & Planets; travel & tourism; United States;

Are UFOs or UAPs real?

Planetary Society Weblog | 20 March, 2025
Something weird is happening -- something that, even as an astronomer, I once struggled to explain....
Categories: None

An Asteroid’s Bite in an Australian Mountain Range

The asteroid that smashed into northern Australia and caused the Amelia Creek impact structure transformed mountain ridges in the blast zone. Read More......
Categories: None

Carbon-Nutrient Ratios Drive Nitrate Removal in Mediterranean Streams

AGU Editors' Vox | 19 March, 2025
Heterotrophic aquatic bacteria require carbon and nutrients to survive, and consequently, remove dissolved nutrients and organic matter from streams - acting as a form of water filter. While this process is well understood, it is less certain how the balance of nutrients and organic matter, as well as variation in organic matter composition, impacts the efficiency of nutrient removal by heterotrophic bacteria.
Categories: Editors' Highlights; bacteria & microbes; biogeochemistry; carbon; carbon cycle; ecosystems; fertilizer; Health & Ecosystems; Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences; Mediterranean; nitrogen; nutrients; phosphorus; Water quality;

Andean glaciers have shrunk more than ever before in the entire Holocene

RealClimate | 19 March, 2025
Glaciers are important indicators of climate change. A recent study published in the leading journal Science shows that glaciers in the tropical Andes have now retreated further than at any other time in the entire Holocene - which covers the whole history of human civilisation since the invention of agriculture. These findings are likely to resonate beyond the scientific community, as they strongly support the lawsuit filed by a Peruvian farmer against the energy company RWE, which has returned to court this week.Paleoclimatologists can determine how long bedrock beneath a glacier has been covered by ice using measurements of specific isotopes. When rock surfaces are exposed, isotopes such as carbon-14 and beryllium-10 form due to bombardment by cosmic radiation. If, however, the rock is covered by an ice sheet, it is shielded from this radiation, and these unstable isotopes gradually disappear through radioactive decay (with half-lives of 5,700 and 1.4 million years, respectively). This method, known as cosmogenic radionuclide dating, has been well-established for decades. I first encountered it myself 23 years ago during an excursion with glacier experts to New Zealand's Southern Alps.
Categories: Climate impacts; Climate Science; Featured Story; Andes; flood; Glacial; Huaraz; outburst; RWE;

The March 24-Month study and the myth of a “Compact Call”

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 19 March, 2025
The Bureau of Reclamation released its March 24-Month study last Friday and just like last month, the forecast is for big trouble in the Colorado River Basin. Under the "Most Probable" scenario, the ten-year cumulative flow at Lee Ferry will drop below 82.5 million acre-feet (the "tripwire") by the end of Water Year 2027.  If this happens, the odds are high that the Lower Division states will trigger what they referred to in their February 13, 2025, letter to Secretary Burgum as a "compact call."  The nuance, however, is that the Colorado River Compact has no specific provision for a compact call. Under the compact, a call is just another word for interstate litigation.
Categories: Colorado River; water;

Why Sustainability Matters in Marathons

State of the Planet | 19 March, 2025
An M.S. in Sustainability Science graduate reflects on the pros and cons of running marathons--for people and the planet....
Categories: Sustainability; Viewpoints; alumni; MS in Sustainability Science;

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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