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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Some Fish Will Never Learn

Tooth and Bone | 16 July, 2026
Categories: None

Wildfire Smoke Returns: What to Know About This Week’s Air Quality

State of the Planet | 16 July, 2026
Air pollution expert Dan Westervelt discusses this summer's wildfires and resulting air quality in New York City and beyond....
Categories: Climate; Natural Disasters; air quality; cs highlights; Dan Westervelt; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; wildfires;

Comment of the American Geophysical Union regarding the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) proposed rule to revise the Guidance for Federal Financial Assistance

AGU serves as a pathway for scientists to disseminate their research to colleagues and the public through publications, conferences, and collaborations with communities, universities, and NGOs throughout the globe. Our 24 top quality research journals, including Geophysical Research Letters and Earth's Future and the dedicated professionals who sustain them play a vital role in ensuring high...
Categories: AGU Letter;

Quoting Sherlock Holmes

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 16 July, 2026
"Your fatal habit of looking at everything from the point of view of a story instead of as a scientific exercise has ruined what might have been an instructive and even classical series of demonstrations. You slur over work of the utmost finesse a...
Categories: mind;

Volcano risk management

Volcano Cafe | 16 July, 2026
Imagine. You are being put in charge of planning for a future major volcanic eruption. All you have is an incomplete list of volcanoes in the world, some experience of past eruptions, and a few volcanologists as consultants. The politician who gave y...
Categories: General Musing; Starvation; Large Eruptions; Volcanic Disasters;

DINOSAUR RIVALRY: MANTELLISAURUS

Fossil Huntress | 16 July, 2026
Mantellisaurus atherfieldensis This story begins some 125 million years ago on the lush floodplains of what is now the Isle of Wight, back in the Cretaceous.Forget the cool, windswept English coastline of today. This was a warm, subtropical worl...
Categories: DINOSAUR; famous; london; MANTELL; mantellisaurus; owen; paleontologists; rivalry; thumb;

The Eastern Pacific is a tropical storm factory, and the Atlantic Basin shows signs of life

Eye On the Storm | 16 July, 2026
The Eastern Pacific is roaring ahead. Now the Atlantic is waking up--and the season's peak could pack a bigger punch closer to land.
Categories: Eye on the Storm; Feature Article; Weather Extremes; Irene Sans;

Summer conference season 2026

Earth & Solar System | 16 July, 2026
It is summer conference season once again, and following the British Planetary Science Conference in June, various member of the group are presenting their work at other conferences this summer. This year's Goldschmidt conference is taking place Mo...
Categories: News; Canada; Conference; Frankfurt; Germany; Goldschmidt; Goldschmidt 2026; Met Soc; Met Soc 2026; Meteoritical Society; Montreal;

Delving deep into mountains for future water security

The project team of a recent visit to the study basin in central Taiwan. BGS © UKRI.
Categories: BGS news; asia; groundwater; hydrology; international; water security;

Geology in Björk’s soundscapes – from tectonic metaphors to emotional terrains

Arguably Iceland's most iconic artist, Björk often draws on the island's geologically active terrain as metaphor and mood. Across her ten studio albums, two stand out for how deeply they connect human emotion with natural processes: Biophilia (2011) and Vulnicura (2015). Biophilia is analytical and curious, framing natural forces through scientific-like lenses. Vulnicura, in contrast, is raw and personal, using geological metaphors to chart the emotional devastation of heartbreak.
Categories: Geology; Iceland; Magma; Volcanoes; #art; #Bjork; #geology; #Music; #Volcanoes;

When Mud Flows Behave Like Glaciers: Discovering the Secrets of Azerbaijan’s Mud Volcanoes

Introduction When people hear the word „volcano", they usually think of a magmatic volcano with impressive pyroclastic eruptions or lava flows. However, mud volcanoes are different. Mud volcanoes erupt what we call mud breccias, a mixture of gas,...
Categories: Uncategorized; Azerbaijan; eruption; historical imagery; InSAR; mud flow; mud volcano; remote sensing; topographic change;

Frontier volumes, near-field risk

GEOExPro | 16 July, 2026
Papua New Guinea (PNG) rarely features in the E&P headlines, but in fact, the country has a lot to offer when it comes to the exploration scene. TotalEnergies and partner Petronas are likely to be drilling PNG's first deepwa­ter well, Mailu-1, later this year, target­ing a carbonate reef, which has the po­tential to be a...
Categories: Oil & Gas; Papua New Guinea;

Guest Post: From Research to Community Action: How Science Communication Inspires Better Water and Waste Management

By Okunowo Oluwafemi Olutayo, AGU Voices for Science International Fellow As Earth scientists, we spend countless hours studying the Earth's systems, collecting data, and developing solutions to environmental challenges. Yet one question continues to shape my work: How do we ensure that scientific knowledge reaches the people whose everyday decisions determine the health of our environment?
Categories: Value of science; Water;

New paper on Ordovician cryptic marine ecosystems

Wooster Geologists | 15 July, 2026
My Estonian friend and colleague Olev Vinn led a team reviewing the ecological innovation of organisms encrusting the interiors of mollusk shells in the Ordovician. It is yet another example of the extraordinary diversification of marine organisms in this period. The image above is a reconstruction of bryozoans and cornulitids in an empty snail shell on an Ordovician seafloor. Our paper is just out as early access in Scientific Reports (Vinn et al., 2026).
Categories: Uncategorized; cryptos; Estonia; fossils; Ordovician;

Climate Change Hits Home: A Review of The Lost Trees of Willow Avenue

Mike Tidwell, climate activist and founder of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, posits that, if you were to throw a dart at a spinning globe, no matter where the dart punctured the surface of the globe, that actual spot on the Earth would have a...
Categories: carbon dioxide; Chesapeake Climate Action Network; climate change; greenhouse gas; Mike Tidwell; oak trees; reflecting sunlight; solar radiation modification; Takoma Park;

New NASA Study Says Possibly No Limit to Solar Storm Effects

NASA Science News | 15 July, 2026
For decades, scientists have thought that there is a ceiling to how intensely Earth responds to solar storms. However, a NASA-led paper published Wednesday in Nature suggests this upper limit is an illusion. If so, it means solar storms could have f...
Categories: Blogs; Goddard Space Flight Center; Heliophysics; Heliophysics Division; Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS); Science & Research; Science Mission Directorate; Solar Wind; Space Weather; The Sun; THEMIS (Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions During Substorms); Wind Mission;

Puerto Rico’s Energy Future: Is Gas the Only Option?

State of the Planet | 15 July, 2026
Some experts and advocates say the government's push for liquefied natural gas is standing in the way of renewable energy goals....
Categories: Energy; Viewpoints; Climate and Society alumni; energy grid; puerto rico; renewable energy;

HUNTER OF PANTHALASSAN SEAS: SHONISAURUS

Fossil Huntress | 15 July, 2026
Shonisaurus sikanni / Sikanni Chief River More than 200 million years ago, when the supercontinent Pangaea was still knitting the world together, a leviathan moved through the warm Panthalassan seas that covered what is now northeastern British Colum...
Categories: becky; chief; death; dragon; ichthyosaur; sea; sex; shonisaurus; sikanni; taxes;

Currently reading Laidlaw (2026): “When faculty ask, ‘what’s the point of teaching?’: GenAI as identity crisis, not skills gap”

Another article that I read just now and that really resonated with me is Laidlaw (2026), where they explore teachers' reactions to GenAI as an identity crisis, not a skills gap. Similarly to what Laidlaw (2026) describes, I have met a lot of colle...
Categories: literature; academic development; GenAI; teaching for sustainability; threshold concept;

What happens now that comments have been submitted on the devastating OMB rules?

Planetary Society Weblog | 15 July, 2026
Nearly 500,000 comments were submitted in response to a rule change proposed by the White House Office of Management and Budget that would fundamentally change how science is funded in the United States. Here's what comes next....
Categories: None

From vision to discovery

GEOExPro | 15 July, 2026
The Niger Delta has delivered many of West Africa's defining hydrocarbon discoveries, but every so often a well comes along that exceeds expectations. JK??'004 marks the first major success under Renaissance's refreshed exploration strategy. The well was drilled in shallow waters and encountered approximately 1,000 feet of hydrocarbon-bearing column. It cuts across seven distinct reservoirs...
Categories: From the Industry; AOW;

The truth about The Odyssey: Geodynamics, lies, cries and the hunt for Ithaca

EGU Geodynamics Division | 15 July, 2026
If you have ever tried to draw a geological cross-section under a fantasy map, Homer is surprisingly cooperative (and if you remember my Middle-earth geology post, you already know I live for this). The Odyssey is full of real places and real people--Troy, Mycenae, Sparta--stitched together with storms, monsters and divine interventions that would make any structural geologist reach for a stress tensor. But there is one stubborn problem in this otherwise satisfying world: Ithaca, Odysseus' homeland, is... kind of missing.
Categories: Book Review; Geodynamics 101; Remarkable Regions; electromagnetic; geodynamics; Greece; Homer; The Odyssey;

Michigan Court of Appeals Decision Largely Upholds Michigan PSC’s Renewable Energy Siting Process

Climate Law Blog | 14 July, 2026
Michigan has recently taken steps to centralize and streamline the siting of renewable energy projects, in response to ongoing challenges from local opposition. In 2023, the Michigan state legislature enacted, and Governor Whitmer signed, Public Ac...
Categories: Energy; Renewable Energy; Michigan; PA233; RELDI;

This could be the strongest El Niño on record

Eye On the Storm | 14 July, 2026
Already, tropical cyclones are peppering the Pacific and skipping the Atlantic, and U.S. temperatures are topsy-turvy.
Categories: Eye on the Storm; Feature Article; Weather Extremes; Bob Henson;

A grim Colorado River milestone

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 14 July, 2026
At Lake Mead and Lake Powell, a historic low On Sunday, the Colorado River passed a grim milestone. Total combined storage in Lake Mead and Lake Powell dropped to a historic low. It was my Wilburys colleague Jack Schmidt who noticed the milestone: ...
Categories: Colorado River; water;

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

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