The Authors
Search this blog
Categories
Archives
-
Recent Posts
- The Cuyahoga River burned today for the first time in 51 years. Here’s what we can learn from it.
- Spooky seismic action at a distance: moderate earthquakes in western US cause submarine landslides in the Gulf of Mexico
- Two reflections on the largest earthquake yet recorded, 60 years later.
- Watershed Hydrology – Complete Compendium of my Online Teaching Resources
- How I taught Flooding online in Spring 2020
- How I taught Streamflow online in Spring 2020
- How I taught Streamflow Generation online in Spring 2020
- How I taught Soil Moisture and Infiltration online in spring 2020
Latest Comments
- On How wet is the unsaturated zone?:
- John Selker: For lot’s more videos on soil moisture topics, see Drs Selker and Or’s text-book... Read
- Chris Rowan: Actually, a (fortunately small) tsunami was generated in the aftermath of the quake:... Read
- Anthony: Wow Chris this was the most excellent explanation of recent Kilauea activity i could find – so... Read
- Lyle: Note 50 years is the average lifetime of a commercial building a single family home tends more to the 75... Read
- Eric J. Fielding: Great blog post! Only suggestion is that the Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast... Read
- Tor B: Hmmm, I refreshed the page and the ‘last parent standing’ changed, but then settled back to... Read
- Tor B: Nice graphics, but the last purple ‘atom’ is always fourth from the right on the top row. I... Read
Monthly Archives: December 2010
Participate in the AGU panel on geoblogging, even if you are not at the meeting
Later this afternoon, your friendly neighborhood geobloggers will convene at the AGU meeting for a panel on the payoffs and perils of blogging. Panelists include both Chris and Anne, Brian Romans from Clastic Detritus, Jess Ball from Magma Cum Laude, … Continue reading
How the conference presentation was done
Any resemblance to the task of producing my poster for AGU is purely coincidental.
Where we’ll be at AGU
‘Tis the season to…. go to a conference? A couple of weeks before Christmas might not seem like the most sensible time to hold a big international conference, but next week tens of thousands of geoscientists will descend on the … Continue reading
Geobloggers – why do you blog?
For geology bloggers, one of the most interesting, and encouraging, things about 2010 was that two big geological organisations – the Geological Society of America and the American Geophysical Union – have started to grasp, and exploit, the potential of … Continue reading
Hey, NASA: this is what peer review actually looks like
‘Scientists dispute newly published research’ isn’t a headline. It’s what scientists do. Continue reading

