The best of Geology and Earth Science on the web
Welcome to all-geo.org

LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Fire Chars Santa Rosa Island

Elegant Figures | 19 May, 2026
Channel Islands National Park, a chain of five ecologically rich islands off the coast of mainland California, is known for its diversity of plant and animal species, earning it the nickname "North America's Galapagos." For part of May 2026, Santa Rosa Island--the park's second-largest island--was closed to the public as firefighters worked to contain a wildland fire burning through grassland, coastal sage scrub, and areas of island chaparral.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Landsat 9; Wildfires;

Dr. Kelly Korreck

Elegant Figures | 19 May, 2026
Dr. Kelly Korreck is the program scientist for the Living with a Star (LWS) program within the Heliophysics Division of NASA's Science Mission Directorate. She leads the strategic planning and programmatic management of the LWS mission portfolio, which focuses on the Sun-Earth system and its impact on life and society. In this role, she ensures that missions providing predictive understanding of space weather meet technical, budgetary, and scientific milestones to protect technology, communication systems, and human exploration in space.
Categories: None

Congratulations to the 2026 Graduates of the Columbia Climate School

State of the Planet | 19 May, 2026
On May 15, M.A. in Climate and Society and M.S. in Climate Finance students gathered to celebrate their accomplishments....
Categories: Climate; Education; Alexis Abramson; Class Day; Class Day 2026; cs highlights; education news; Jeffrey Shaman; Kristina G. Douglass; Lisa Allyn Dale; Lisa Sachs; MA in Climate and Society; MS in Climate Finance;

2026-05-19: Federal managers increase release for the silvery minnow

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 19 May, 2026
Federal water managers yesterday (May 18, 2026) began pushing a pulse of water through New Mexico's rapidly drying Middle Rio Grande to try to encourage the endangered Rio Grande silvery minnow to spawn.
Categories: adaptation; Albuquerque; climate change; climate variability; Colorado River; Ribbons of Green; water;

Farming in Ancient Lake Agassiz

Elegant Figures | 18 May, 2026
Editor's Note: Today's story is the answer to the May Puzzler.About 15,000 years ago, southeastern Manitoba sat beneath tens of meters of frigid water. Lake Agassiz--which once encompassed present-day Lake Manitoba, Lake Winnipeg, and Lake of the Woods--covered an area larger than all of the Great Lakes combined. It formed in front of the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet, which dammed rivers that otherwise might have drained into Hudson Bay, producing an expansive body of water 1,100 kilometers (700 miles) long by 300 kilometers wide that spanned parts of today's Manitoba, Ontario, Saskatchewan, North Dakota, and Minnesota.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Agriculture;

Revisiting Aquilops and Pentaceratops at the Sam Noble Museum

One reason I was so happy to be invited to the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History to talk about horned dinosaurs is because the museum has two of the coolest ones on display: Aquilops, the smallest and earliest ceratopsian in North America...
Categories: Aquilops; Aquilops merch; museums; OMNH; Pentaceratops; public galleries; stinkin' heads; stinkin' mammals; stinkin' ornithischians; stinkin' SV-POW!sketeers; toys;

ASTRA Initiative Questions and Answers

Elegant Figures | 18 May, 2026
Q: Does a NASA Center have to be involved in the proposal? 
Categories: Cosmic Origins Program;

Columbia Climate School Mace Bearer Carries a Tradition Forward

State of the Planet | 18 May, 2026
This year, professors Kristina Guild Douglass and Michel Sadelain will both hold the ceremonial role....
Categories: Education; Press Release; anthropology; climate; graduation; Kristina G. Douglass; MacArthur Foundation;

Great Balls of Fire

Elegant Figures | 17 May, 2026
The outermost layers of Earth's atmosphere, the thermosphere and exosphere, are relatively busy places. In these layers, tens of thousands of trackable objects, including satellites and various types of debris, orbit the planet. They are also where dozens of tons of meteoric material enter daily, occasionally producing bright fireballs as the pieces burn up.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Earth; Earth's Atmosphere; International Space Station (ISS);

Where did the One of our Dinosaurs is Missing dinosaur come from?

It's now fairly well established that the remains of the Krayt Dragon that C-3PO and R2-D2 walk past in an early Tatooine scene of Star Wars (1977) were re-used from the knockabout Disney film One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing (1975).
Categories: Diplodocus; help SV-POW!; mounts; movies; Star Wars;

Fertilizer, Energy and Liebig's Law of the Minimum

Resource Insights | 17 May, 2026
The loss of fertilizer shipments coming from the Persian Gulf as a result of the Iran war got me thinking about the chemist Justus von Liebig, a prominent 19th century proponent of the mineral theory of plant nutrition. Li...
Categories: None

SpaceX Dragon Docks to Station Filled with New Science Experiments

Elegant Figures | 17 May, 2026
At 6:37 a.m. EDT, the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft docked to the forward port of the International Space Station's Harmony module, carrying nearly 6,500 pounds of food, supplies, and equipment for the Expedition 74 crew. This is the 34th SpaceX commercial resupply services mission to the space station for NASA.
Categories: Commercial Resupply; International Space Station (ISS); ISS Research; SpaceX Commercial Resupply;

AbSciCon

Elegant Figures | 16 May, 2026
ExEP...Meetings/EventsAbSciConExEP HomeOverviewTeamMissionsScienceOverviewDecadal SurveysExoExplorersTechnologyTechnology OverviewNeeds and Gap ListsStrategic Astrophysics Technology (SAT) Awards ExEP Technology Colloquium SeriesIn-Space Servicing an...
Categories: Uncategorized;

Curiousiday at the Sam Noble Museum: Sauroposeidon, Apatosaurus, Aquilops, and more

Last Friday night I was at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History to talk about horned dinosaurs, for the launch of the "Bizarre Headgear" exhibit. But last Saturday I was there for "Curiousiday", to talk about Sauroposeidon. I wa...
Categories: Aquilops; Art; Brian Engh; cervical; diplodocids; Giant Irish Matt; Giant Oklahoma apatosaurine; navel blogging; OMNH; Sauroposeidon; stinkin' heads; stinkin' mammals; stinkin' ornithischians; stinkin' SV-POW!sketeers; travel;

NASA Calibration Instrument Launches to International Space Station

Elegant Figures | 15 May, 2026
On Friday, NASA's Calibration Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory Pathfinder (CLARREO Pathfinder) instrument launched aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station as part of SpaceX's 34th commercial resupply se...
Categories: None

Amendment 57: D.3 AGIGO: IXPE and NICER General Observer Second Opportunity in ROSES-25

Elegant Figures | 15 May, 2026
The IXPE GO Program solicits proposals for investigations in any area of astrophysics (not constrained to IXPE's prime science areas). IXPE Cycle 4 observations will commence on or about February 1, 2027, and continue for a nominal period of 12 months. Individuals may submit proposals for observations that will advance the IXPE mission science return. Observing proposals may be for "standard," "Target-of-Opportunity (ToO)", "Large Program (LP)" or "Multi-cycle" observations. Theory proposals are not solicited. For ToO observations, IXPE anticipates executing approximately 1 high (observations begin within 9 days of trigger) and 7 medium (observations begin between 9 days and 4 weeks of trigger) priority triggers in this GO cycle, hence proposers must strongly justify the response time required to meet the scientific objectives.
Categories: Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences (ROSES); Astrophysics; International Space Station (ISS); IXPE (Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer); NICER (Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer); Science Mission Directorate;

The “Bizarre Headgear” exhibit at the Sam Noble Museum is incredible

As threatened, I was in Oklahoma at the tail end of last week and over the weekend, mostly to give talks. My Friday evening public lecture was on horned dinosaurs, and it was tied in with the launch of a temporary exhibit called "Bizarre Headgear: Ceratopsians and the Evolution of Extraordinary Skulls". I'll cover the talks in another post; this one is about that exhibit.
Categories: Aquilops; cabinet of curiosities; Ceratopsians; freakin sharks; life restorations; museums; OMNH; People we like; stinkin' every thing that's not a sauropod; stinkin' heads; stinkin' mammals; stinkin' ornithischians; stinkin' pterosaurs; timely; toys; travel;

UAP? In this case, it’s only a model.

A model Mars capsule flew through the air. Alien ships likely didn't....
Categories: None

 Extraterrestrial Photosynthesis Workshop

Elegant Figures | 14 May, 2026
ExEP...Meetings/Events Extraterrestrial...ExEP HomeOverviewTeamMissionsScienceOverviewDecadal SurveysExoExplorersTechnologyTechnology OverviewNeeds and Gap ListsStrategic Astrophysics Technology (SAT) Awards ExEP Technology Colloquium SeriesIn-Space...
Categories: Uncategorized;

NASA’s X-59 Team Testing Aircraft Performance at All Speeds

Elegant Figures | 14 May, 2026
Although NASA's X-59 is designed to fly supersonic, its test flight schedule is about more than just going gradually faster and higher - sometimes, to make sure the aircraft is fully mission-ready, slower and lower is the way to go.
Categories: Aeronautics; Armstrong Flight Research Center; Commercial Supersonic Technology; Low Boom Flight Demonstrator; Quesst (X-59); Quesst: The Flights; Supersonic Flight;

Indonesia May Soon Lose Its Last Glaciers

State of the Planet | 14 May, 2026
Scientists estimate that Indonesia will lose its two remaining glaciers by 2030--a warning for glaciers around the world....
Categories: GlacierHub; cs highlights; El Niño; El Niño-Southern Oscillation; glacial retreat; Indonesia; Indonesia Puncak Jaya; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; Michael Kaplan;

Geology of the National Parks in Pictures - Effigy Mounds National Monument

The Geology P.A.G.E | 14 May, 2026
My next post about the Geology of the National Parks Through Pictures is from our move across the country from Utah to New York. Along the way we visited 13 National Parks as well as some other sites. This was the 12th National Park along the way.
Categories: Iowa; National parks;

House Appropriators advance key NASA funding bill

The bill keeps NASA funding flat with the currently enacted budget, but reprioritizes funding levels across the agency, including a 17% cut to Science to offset increases elsewhere....
Categories: None

Ice Moves Out of Aniak

Elegant Figures | 13 May, 2026
Thawing may be a welcome sight for Alaskans following a remarkably cold winter and early spring in much of the state. But with melting comes the threat of rapid flooding in low-lying areas as river ice breaks up and periodically jams.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Floods; Landsat 9; Snow; Surface Water;

Geotripper Rates Hollywood Movie Geologists (AND, see "Tremors" at the State Theatre on May 20!)

Geotripper | 13 May, 2026
One of my earliest blog posts (in 2008) was a list of my favorite depictions of geologists in movies. I've revisited it once or twice. It came to mind as we prepare to offer a showing of "Tremors" as a geology field studies fundraiser at the State Th...
Categories: Dante's Peak; Hollywood geology; Hollywood movies; Jurassic Park; San Andreas movie; Tremors;

Latest: Are “steady-state” systems ahistorical?

Latest: New paper! Comparing Flood Inundation Map Features and Diagnosing Decision Support Design Challenges

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

All-geo.org