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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Petalodus Shark Tooth Fossil

These pictures show a Petalodus (Hall, 1858) shark tooth fossil. They were found in the Glen Dean Formation of Grayson County, Kentucky USA. The fossils date to the Mississippian Period. Thanks to Kenny for the images....
Categories: glen dean member; Kentucky; mississippian; shark tooth;

Antarctic Sea Ice Plunged in Summer 2025

The region's ice extent on March 1 tied for the second-lowest minimum observed in the satellite record. Read More......
Categories: None

UNEARTHING FOSSIL BIRD BONES ON SOUTHERN VANCOUVER ISLAND

Fossil Huntress | 1 April, 2025
Stemec suntokum, a Fossil Plopterid from Sooke, BCWe all love the idea of discovering a new species--especially a fossil species lost to time. As romantic as it sounds, it happens more often than you think. I can think of more than a dozen...
Categories: author; BIRD; Blog; fossil; fossilhuntress; Heidi; Henderson; huntress; island; paleontologist; paleontology; podcast; Vancouver; woman; women; writer;

Kilauea Eruptions in Halema'uma'u Crater

Earthly Musings | 1 April, 2025
Screen capture from about 1:30 PM Hawaiian local time on April 1, 2025 If you have not been watching the live WebCam from the Kilauea volcano, check it out here. Spectacular fountaining going on.HAWAIIAN VOLCANO OBSERVATORY STATUS REPORTU.S. Geologi...
Categories: None

We Have the Power To Protect Our Planet

State of the Planet | 1 April, 2025
Our Power, Our Planet is the theme of Earth Day 2025, and it invites the world to join together in support of renewable energy....
Categories: Energy; Sustainability; cs highlights; Earth Day; renewable energy;

1,900 Scientists Warn Of “Real Danger” In Open Letter

AGU Editors' Vox | 1 April, 2025
In an open letter to the American people, more than 1,900 scientists sent an "SOS" that the Trump administration's actions have "decimated" the nation's scientific enterprise and censored scientific work. "We see real danger in this moment," the scientists wrote.
Categories: Research & Developments; climate; Climate Change; culture & policy; Education & Careers; public health;

The Rivers That Science Says Shouldn’t Exist

AGU Editors' Vox | 1 April, 2025
Rivers join downstream, flow downhill, and eventually meet an ocean or terminal lake: These are fundamental rules of how waterways and basins are supposed to work. But rules are made to be broken. Sowby and Siegel lay out nine rivers and lakes in the Americas that defy hydrologic expectations.
Categories: Research Spotlights; Earth science; geomorphology; North America; rivers; South America; Water Resources Research; weird & wonderful;

Unforced Variations: Apr 2025

RealClimate | 1 April, 2025
This month's open thread for climate topics. Please try to stay focused on climate instead of generic (and tedious) political sniping.
Categories: Climate Science; Open thread; Solutions;

Let the Idiocracy Begin

Open Mind | 1 April, 2025
Ever since the election of Donald (Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho) Trump as President of the United States, climate denial has been in overdrive, and the intellectual honesty of its purveyors, in the toilet. Case in point: Steve Milloy ...
Categories: climate change; Global Warming;

Mount Rainier development

Volcano Cafe | 1 April, 2025
Mount Rainier to become spaceport Mountain renamed Mount Bezos A top-secret development on Mount Rainier came out in the open this morning. There was widespread surprise and excitement when people in Tacoma and Seattle saw a rocket was launched from ...
Categories: Breaking news; Volcanocafé;

Seamounts and Abyssal Hills Mapped From Space

Depictions of the seafloor derived from satellite data can improve underwater navigation and increase knowledge of how heat and life move around the world's ocean. Read More......
Categories: None

GSA – Erie 2025

Wooster Geologists | 31 March, 2025
Wooster Earth Scientists traveled to Erie PA to attend the joint Northeast /North-Central Geological Society of America for a weekend of geology talks, posters and fieldtrips.
Categories: Uncategorized;

Coastal Hydrogeology: Understanding Local Factors Controlling Ecology and Habitat Resiliency on Waties Island, South Carolina

Speaking of Geoscience | 31 March, 2025
Contributed by Dean Wrobel, GSA Graduate Student Research Grant Recipient
Categories: Field Geology; Reflection; Science Communication; earth science; geology; geoscience; science communication;

Introducing Duonychus tsogtbaatari

Letters from Gondwana | 31 March, 2025
Therizinosauria is a group of unusual theropod dinosaurs known from Cretaceous deposits in Asia and North America. The clade exhibits unique features, including lanceolate teeth, a rostral rhamphotheca, and a broad, opisthopubic pelvis. Some of those characteristics are associated with a shift in dietary preferences and an adaptation to herbivory. But the most striking feature, as exemplified by the large-bodied Therizinosaurus from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia, is the presence of tridactyl (three-fingered) hands with three large claw-like unguals.
Categories: Earth Science; Cretaceous; dinosaur evolution; Mongolia; palaeobiology; Therizinosauria;

Climate Scientists Unite to Nominate U.S. Experts for IPCC Report

AGU Editors' Vox | 31 March, 2025
In late February, delegates from more than 190 countries met in Hangzhou, China to make preliminary decisions about the timing and content of the seventh assessment report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The Trump administration barred U.S. delegates from attending the February meeting, one step among many the president has taken to abandon America's global leadership on climate change.
Categories: Research & Developments; climate; Climate Change; culture & policy; IPCC; science policy;

Poets and Polders

State of the Planet | 31 March, 2025
Continuing on our journey, we visited the shrine and former home of Bangladeshi cultural icons, continued our interviews, and boarded a boat to take us to the embanked islands known as polders....
Categories: Climate; Earth Sciences; Poverty / Development; Sustainability; climate; Geohazards in Bangladesh; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; sustainable development; water matters;

That orange creek in Joaquin Miller Park

Oakland Geology | 31 March, 2025
A while ago I was asked about a spot in Joaquin Miller Park where the stream bed is bright orange. It's been this way for a while; I have an email message from six years ago mentioning it. I gave it a good look-see the other week.
Categories: Oakland geology puzzles;

GeoRoundup: the highlights of EGU Journals published during March!

EGU Geolog | 31 March, 2025
Each month we feature specific Divisions of EGU and during the monthly GeoRoundup we put the journals that publish science from those Divisions at the top of the Highlights section. This month, we are not featuring any particular divisions, but an ensemble of all the highlights of this month instead.
Categories: GeoRoundup; News; Publications; EGU news; EGU publications; GeoRoundUp; media; open access; publication highlights;

AGU Statement on the Earthquake in Myanmar

From The Prow | 31 March, 2025
Our hearts are with the people of Myanmar and the surrounding region following the powerful 7.7-magnitude earthquake on Friday that has caused widespread devastation. We mourn the loss of life and express our support for those who have been injured, displaced, or impacted by this tragedy.  
Categories: Science and society; feature; featured;

Questions about accessibility at EGU25? Your guide to attending with children, special access resources and overcoming conference barriers.

EGU Geolog | 31 March, 2025
The annual EGU General Assembly is a wonderful chance to gather together with friends and colleagues to discuss recent scientific work, plan new projects and develop your career, but a scientific meeting, especially one the size and length of time of the General Assembly is not an equally accessible experience for everyone. With this in mind over the years EGU have developed a range of resources aimed at increasing the accessibility of the meeting to a more diverse group of people, but if you are unsure what those resources are, we have gathered many of them in this blog to help you find them, whether you are a person attending with children, with a disability, with specific religious requirements, travel challenges or any other reason, to help you have the best meeting possible!
Categories: Accessibility and inclusivity at EGU; Conferences; EGU GA 2025; General Assembly; Vienna; Accessibility; childcare; EGU code of conduct; EGU25; harrassment; Inclusivity; mental health; scientific conference;

Evidence for Plate tectonics beneath the oceans - using satellites

Earth Learning Idea | 31 March, 2025
The new ELI today is 'Laser Quest 2 - above the waves; seeing evidence for plate tectonics beneath the oceans - using satellites.'
Categories: Investigating the Earth;

Mangrove Pioneers

The right climatic and geographic conditions in the southeastern U.S. have allowed mangroves to migrate northward to Georgia. Read More......
Categories: None

America First: Can it be squared with proposed 'annexation' of Greenland, Canada and the Panama Canal?

Resource Insights | 30 March, 2025
The "America First" slogan often used by candidate Donald Trump in his first and second presidential campaigns might sound on its surface to indicate disengagement from global affairs and a focus on domestic priorities. So, it may s...
Categories: None

Worm Tube Fossil

These pictures are of a worm tube fossil. Fossil found in the New Providence Formation of Clark County, Indiana USA. It dates to the Mississippian Period. Thanks to Kenny for the images. ...
Categories: indiana; mississippian; new providence; worm; worm tube;

National Parks Under Snow

Gateway towns in Wyoming and Montana flank the Rocky Mountains and provide an access point to Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. Read More......
Categories: None

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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