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

LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Geology of the National Parks in Pictures - Cuyahoga Valley National Park

The Geology P.A.G.E | 16 June, 2026
My next post about the Geology of the National Parks Through Pictures is from a trip to Ohio shortly after we moved to New York for a memorial service for my dear friend Dale.
Categories: National parks; Ohio;

Heavy rains slam the Texas coast ahead of Potential Tropical Cyclone One

Eye On the Storm | 16 June, 2026
As it slogs northeastward, the system may become a tropical depression or tropical storm - but flooding is a real threat regardless.
Categories: Eye on the Storm; Feature Article; Weather Extremes; Bob Henson; Irene Sans; Jeff Masters;

British Planetary Science Conference 2026

Earth & Solar System | 16 June, 2026
The British Planetary Science Conference took place in St Andrews in mid-June bringing together scientists across the UK who research anything and everything to do with our Solar System. A group of us travelled north to present, learn and enjoy eve...
Categories: News; Space; BPSC; BPSC2026; British Planetary Science Conference; Conference; St Andrews; UK Planetary Forum; UKPF;

The AI Revolution Mirrors the Green Transition

State of the Planet | 16 June, 2026
The AI buildout and the green transition each present significant and similar opportunities and challenges....
Categories: Climate; Energy; Viewpoints; artificial intelligence; Gernot Wagner; green economy; green transition; renewable energy;

Volcano World Cup – Group D

Eruptions | 16 June, 2026
Be sure to vote for Group D in the poll at the bottom! USA - 340/165/63/39 - Great Sitkin, K?lauea USGS volcanologists watching the June 15, 2026 eruption of K?lauea in Hawai'i. Credit: HVO/USGS. The US has never been great at intern...
Categories: Uncategorized;

Revisiting the key Science for Policy conversations at EGU26

EGU Geolog | 16 June, 2026
As we left EGU26 behind with record participation, it was amazing to see increased interest in science-policy sessions from the scientific community. Thanks to all panellists who contributed to the stimulating discussions, and to all participants for igniting them!
Categories: EGU GA 2026; Policy; Science Communication; Science for Policy; EU Policy; GeoPolicy; Geoscience for policy; Science for policy; Science for Policy in Europe;

Discoelastic shear

 I think I originally created this for a comment on a structural geologist's blog back in the blogging heyday of the zeros. But I can't find any trace of it on the internet now, so I'm reposting for the younger generation. The following figure i...
Categories: Adequate explanations; Irreproducible idiocy;

NASA Flights Map Tropical Ecosystems, Water, Ice

NASA Science News | 15 June, 2026
Alvin Mitchell, a NASA C-20A aircraft quality assurance inspector, completes preflight checks at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, on April 29 for a mission over Central California. On May 2, the aircraft departed for ...
Categories: Armstrong Flight Research Center; Earth; Floods; Gulfstream C-20A; NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar);

Volcano World Cup – Group C

Eruptions | 15 June, 2026
Be sure to vote for Group C in the poll at the bottom! Brazil - 2/0/0/0 The island of Trindade off the coast of Brazil. Credit: Simone Marinho / Wikimedia Commons. Brazil has some amazing geology ... but active volcanoes are not part of i...
Categories: Volcano World Cup; eruption; geology; science; volcano; volcanoes;

Teaching the Periodic Table

Earth Learning Idea | 15 June, 2026
Continuing with chemistry, our ELI today is 'An Element of fun; an entertaining way to teach Mendeleev's Periodic Table of elements'.
Categories: Earth materials;

Interdisciplinary futures in geoscience: Cross-divisional insights from the Division Presidents – Atmospheric Sciences (AS)

EGU Geolog | 15 June, 2026
This interview is part of an ongoing series exploring the evolving role of interdisciplinarity across the geosciences. As environmental challenges grow more complex, addressing them requires not only disciplinary expertise but also meaningful collaboration and innovation across fields, methodologies, and communities. In each conversation, I ask Division Presidents to reflect on how cross-divisional work is currently practiced, where it falls short, and what more transformative forms of collaboration could look like. Through this series, I aim to surface both practical pathways and significant tensions in interdisciplinary work to highlight why it matters for research, policy, and the broader societal relevance of the geosciences.
Categories: Atmospheric Sciences; EGU Scientific Divisions; atmospheric sciences; Atmospheric Sciences Division; cross sector; interdisciplinary;

Why Do Wrens Build Dummy Nests? It's Complicated

I find much to like about house wrens, including their scientific name: Troglodytes aedon.  It's very appropriate for this vigorous singer and cavity nester. Troglodyte is from the Greek for "hole or cave dweller," while aedon, also Greek in ...
Categories: bird boxes; dummy nests; House Wren; John James Audubon; Margaret Renkl; non-breeding nests;

FOSSIL BEES AND FIRST NATION HISTORY

Fossil Huntress | 14 June, 2026
Welcome to the world of bees. This fuzzy yellow and black striped fellow is a bumblebee in the genus Bombus sp., family Apidae. We know him from our gardens where we see them busily lapping up nectar and pollen from flowers with their ...
Categories: bees; cowichan; dancing; death; first; for; fossil; huntress; indigenous; kwakwala; nations; rene; savenye; sex; taxes; word;

Here's comes the AI bailout: Why government stakes in AI companies are a sucker's bet

Resource Insights | 14 June, 2026
When Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump agree on something, that agreement deserves examination. Both are touting the idea that the federal government should have an ownership stake in major artificial intelligence (AI) compa...
Categories: None

PROEUHOPLITES: TREASURES FROM THE BLUE SLIPPER

Fossil Huntress | 13 June, 2026
Cradled within the soft blue-grey embrace of the Gault Clay lies this beautifully preserved Proeuhoplites subtuberculatus, collected from Bed II (iv) of the Folkestone Gault in Kent, southeast England. Measuring just 35 millimetres across, this ...
Categories: ammonites; Blue; death; devon; dorset; find; formation; fossils; gault; id; sex; slipper; taxes; to; uk; where;

NASA-Funded Research Follows Bird Flight; Birds Follow Their Noses

NASA Science News | 12 June, 2026
Lead researcher Federico De Pascalis of the Italian Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA) holds a Mediterranean storm petrel.A. Benvenuti You might think birds skimming over the ocean wouldn't seek wind unless it was pushin...
Categories: Earth; Oceans;

New Research Indicates That in the Future, Trees May Store Less Carbon Than Expected

State of the Planet | 12 June, 2026
Even as trees photosynthesize late into the year, their growth stops by mid-summer, which impacts their carbon uptake....
Categories: Climate; Earth Sciences; Press Release; carbon cycle; carbon storage; cs highlights; dendrochronology; dendroclimatology; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; Mukund Palat Rao; photosynthesis; research; Tree Ring Lab;

The right stuff

Planetary Society Weblog | 12 June, 2026
Getting people into space takes the right tech, the right talent, and the right policies....
Categories: None

SEXUAL DIMORPHISM: APODEROCERAS

Fossil Huntress | 12 June, 2026
Apoderoceras / Stonebarrow FossilsMeet Apoderoceras, one of the Jurassic's finest ammonites.This beauty is a personal fav of mine and you can see why!These elegant ammonites were masters of sexual dimorphism. The macroconchs -- females -- could gro...
Categories: ammonites; apoderoceras; charmouth; dimorphism; dorset; egg; fossils; production; sexual; west;

Volcano World Cup – Group B

Eruptions | 12 June, 2026
Be sure to vote for Group B in the poll at the bottom! Canada - 37/24/1/0 Mount Meager in British Columbia. Credit: David Steers / Wikimedia Commons I think many people don't believe that Canada has volcanoes. Not that it is a conspiracy...
Categories: Volcano World Cup; Bosnis & Herzegovina; Canada; geology; Qatar; Switzerland; volcano; volcanoes;

Pride month in the era of DEI rollbacks: Reflections on resilience, and why pride was a riot after all

EGU Geolog | 12 June, 2026
Pride month arrives this year against a backdrop of institutional irony. In the United States, federal research funding has been thoroughly weaponised and forced a massive scientific brain drain across the Atlantic. In Europe, a multi-million-euro ef...
Categories: Accessibility and inclusivity at EGU; EDI; Equality Diversity and Inclusion; Pride; Pride in STEM; Pride Month;

Geodesy Cartoons – A Creative Tool for Outreach and Education

EGU Geodesy Division | 12 June, 2026
Geodesy is fundamental to understanding our dynamic planet. From monitoring sea-level rise and glacier melt to maintaining precise terrestrial reference frames for GNSS and Earth observation, geodesy provides the scientific backbone for many disciplines represented within the EGU and beyond. Despite its importance, geodesy often remains invisible outside the scientific community. Even within geosciences, many people use geodetic products daily without fully realizing the complex infrastructure and science behind them.
Categories: Guest post;

The Arctic’s Blind Spot: Why Satellites Struggle Where Ice Meets the Coast

The first time I stood on sea ice, I could not tell which direction the coast was. A community member named Bryan could. That gap in situational awareness, between what a trained remote sensing scientist could read from the landscape and what a local hunter understood instinctively, turned out to mirror almost exactly the gap in our satellite data: ICESat-2 produces reliable freeboard across the central Arctic but goes systematically blind within 25 km of every coastline. This post traces that coastal data gap from its algorithmic roots through its ecological and human consequences, and asks what it would mean to build satellite products that close it on the terms of the communities who need them most.
Categories: Cryo Adventures; Fieldwork;

Subsurface noise #8

GEOExPro | 12 June, 2026
THE REALITY BEHIND FLASHY JOB TITLES I recently spoke with someone who works for a large international operator. To me, as a representative of a very small company, the job titles these people have always sounded very impressive. Exploration manager, this or that, it all suggests major responsibility and momentum. But when I bluntly asked...
Categories: In the News; subsurface noise;

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