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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Unknown Spiny Brachiopod in Black Shale

This fossil is quite interesting. It appears to a brachiopod with very long spines. The fossil is from the collection of the late Dr. James Conkin (1924-2017) and had no label with it. The fossil is in a black shale and the only shale found around th...
Categories: brachiopod; conkin; spiny;

The Brachiosaurus altithorax holotype FMNH PR 25107 in the ground

I was cleaning out my Downloads directory -- which, even after my initial forays, still accounts for 11 Gb that I really need to reclaim from my perptually almost-full SSD. And I found this beautiful image under the filename csgeo4028.jpeg.
Categories: Brachiosaurus; ribs; 4027;

Science on the docket: The 2024 Congressional Day of Action

A recap of The Planetary Society's 2024 Day of Action in Washington, D.C....
Categories: None

In the Jersey Suburbs, a Search for Rocks To Help Fight Climate Change

State of the Planet | 1 May, 2024
Like the tips of icebergs, small outcrops of volcanic basalt in highly populous areas may be representative of rocks under the nearby ocean that could be used in massive carbon-storage projects....
Categories: Climate; Earth Sciences; carbon capture; climate change; cs highlights; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory;

Unforced Variations: May 2024

RealClimate | 30 April, 2024
This month's open thread on climate topics. Many eyes will be focused on whether April temperatures will be the 11th month in row of records...
Categories: Climate Science; Open thread; Solutions;

Ectenocrinus (Heterocrinus) simplex Crinoid Fossil

This fossil appears to be an Ectenocrinus (Heterocrinus) simplex (Hall, 1847) crinoid calyx fossil. It was given to  Lucien Beckner (1872-1963) in earlier 1900s by Dr. William H. Shideler (1886-1958) of Miami University of Ohio. The fossil dates to ...
Categories: beckner; calyx; crinoid; ohio; ordovician;

GeoRoundup: the highlights of EGU Journals published during April!

EGU Geolog | 30 April, 2024
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 roundup. As April was the month we held the General Assembly we are not highl...
Categories: GeoRoundup; News; Publications; EGU news; EGU publications; GeoRoundUp; media; open access; publication highlights;

Ectenocrinus simplex Crinoid Calyx Fossil

This fossil appears to be an Ectenocrinus (Heterocrinus) simplex (Hall, 1847) crinoid calyx fossil. It was found by Lucien Beckner (1872-1963) in 1932 in the blue shale of Henry County Kentucky, USA. The fossil dates to the Ordovician Period....
Categories: beckner; calyx; crinoid; Kentucky; ordovician;

My (Your) Eclipse 2024

Seismos | 29 April, 2024
 Here are the details of the 2024 eclipse for the exact spot we watched it. Scan the QR code to input your own eclipse location. Select 'Get your own copy' at the bottom to generate a commemorative pdf poster, your grandchildren will be love it. 
Categories: None

AGU Board of Directors Meeting, April 2024

Outdoor Science | 29 April, 2024
In April 2024, the AGU Board of Directors gathered in Hoboken, NJ to discuss vital topics shaping the organization's future. The meeting revolved around four key themes: adapting to change, fostering relationships, defining the role of science, and our vision of the future. Framed by a quote from American philosopher Eric Hoffer: "In a world of change, the learners shall inherit the earth, while the learned shall find themselves perfectly ...
Categories: AGU Strategic Plan; Governance; feature; featured;

AGU Board of Directors Meeting, April 2024

From The Prow | 29 April, 2024
In April 2024, the AGU Board of Directors gathered in Hoboken, NJ to discuss vital topics shaping the organization's future. The meeting revolved around four key themes: adapting to change, fostering relationships, defining the role of science, and our vision of the future.
Categories: AGU Strategic Plan; Governance; feature; featured;

A walk in Oakland’s original platform

Oakland Geology | 29 April, 2024
I was asked to lead a walk in the old part of Oakland for a group of engineering geologists that ends at a brewpub. The 3.8-mile route I chose feels too good to keep private. It's as much about interesting parts of town as about interesting bits of geology.
Categories: Oakland geology walks;

A walk in Oakland’s original platform

Oakland Geology | 29 April, 2024
I was asked to lead a walk in the old part of Oakland for a group of engineering geologists that ends at a brewpub. The 3.8-mile route I chose feels too good to keep private. It's as much about interesting parts of town as about interesting bits of geology.
Categories: Oakland geology walks;

Chang’e-6 launch: What to expect

Planetary Society Weblog | 29 April, 2024
China will attempt to return the first-ever samples from the far side of the Moon....
Categories: None

Rapid snowmelt on New Mexico’s Rio Grande

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 29 April, 2024
A recent rapid warmup has brought high flows to the Rio Grande through New Mexico. But with a modest snowpack sitting in the mountains to the north, that means we should expect the early rise to be followed by an early drop.
Categories: New Mexico; Ribbons of Green; water;

Congestion Pricing is Nearly Here

State of the Planet | 29 April, 2024
It is indeed ironic that Democratic New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, Republican Representative Nicole Malliotakis from Staten Island, and Democratic Representative Josh Gottheimer from New Jersey all share intense opposition to congestion pricing sou...
Categories: Urbanization; Viewpoints; congestion; congestion pricing; MS in Sustainability Management News; New York City;

Landforms - work them out from a series of photographs and a few clues

Earth Learning Idea | 29 April, 2024
Our new ELI today is another in our 'Picturing' series - 'Picturing Landforms -2; visualise and draw landforms from a verbal description'.
Categories: Investigating the Earth;

Links: Europa Life, Moon Geology, Citizen Activism

Reporting on a Revolution | 28 April, 2024
Some readings I perused over the past couple of weeks.
Categories: environment; moon; planetary geology; Pune City; remote sensing;

Notes on the Permian Basin

I recently had some ventures in the Permian Basin. The Permian Basin looms large in geology lore and American/global policy. The basin extends from southeast New Mexico trough a wide swath of western Texas. The sediments that were deposited in the basin span much of the Cambrian and were capped by a massive carbonate reef building period during the Permian, The long geologic history recorded in the basin rocks and the massive reef building is a subject in many geology text books in a large part because the Permian Basin has garnered a lot of geologic attention - it is the largest oil producing basin in the United States. Hence, the basin subsurface geology has been well explored and there are very good exposures of the basin rocks along the steep slopes of the Guadalupe Mountains on the western edge of the basin where uplift along a steep set of faults provides good cross sectional views of the Capitan Reef.
Categories: geology; policy;

 The Cost of Fear: How Perceptions of the Deep Sea Hurt Conservation

Deep Sea News | 28 April, 2024
Guest post by Dr. Melissa Betters
Categories: Abyss; Opinion & Editorial; Organisms; Policy;

Presidential immunity and the 'Dark Age Ahead'

Resource Insights | 28 April, 2024
When author Jane Jacobs published Dark Age Ahead in 2004, she was already seeing the signs of a dark age emerging. The prerequisites for such an age are a relentless decline in accountability and transparency across society. The...
Categories: None

Atlantal ribs of the Carnegie Diplodocus, Moscow and Vienna casts

Eighteen months ago, I noted that the Carnegie Museum's Diplodocus mount has no atlantal ribs (i.e. ribs of the first cervical vertebra, the atlas). But that the Paris cast has long atlantal ribs -- so long the extend past the posterior end of the axis.
Categories: atlas-axis complex; Carnegie Museum; cervical; cervical ribs;

Dancing With Scientists

The Nature of Cities | 27 April, 2024
Lindsay: I am co-principal Investigator on a USDA Forest Service (USFS) research project called "Fueling Adaptation" which is looking at wildfire communications, governance, and adaptation as part of the Wildfire Crisis Strategy.  This is work I co-lead with Miranda Mockrin (USFS) and Cody Evers (Portland State University). Our team of social scientists and practitioners met ... Continue reading Dancing With Scientists ??'
Categories: Art & Awareness; Essay; North America; People & Communities; Art; Communities; Culture;

On Rereading A Sand County Almanac

This post describes a few of my reactions upon rereading A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold.  In typical fashion, I come at the subject of this post obliquely.  My opening links only marginally to the topic though it does pay tribute to one of my favorite TV series.
Categories: A Sand County Almanac; Aldo Leopold; conservation; Earth Day; environmentalism; Estella B. Leopold; palynology;

From Fission to Fusion: A Sustainability Student’s Quest for a Greener Future

State of the Planet | 26 April, 2024
Brian Kim, a health physicist at Columbia University, witnessed many natural disasters living in Oregon and New York City. As a current student in the Sustainability Management program, he wants to help solve the climate crisis....
Categories: Education; Sustainability; education news; environmental health; MS in Sustainability Management; MS in Sustainability Management News;

Latest: Golden spike or no golden spike – we are living in the Anthropocene

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