Global alpine mass balance in 2024 as reported to the World Glacier Monitoring Service. Solid line is the cumulative balance, bars are the annual balance.
Each of the last 15 years I have summarized the annual mass balance of alpine glaciers globa...
This month's open thread on climate topics. Impending El Niño, fossil fuel funded wedges, retirements, heat waves, and the same old, same old, from the usual suspects. Try to discuss these things calmly!
The post Unforced Variations: July 202...
Great to see that The College of Wooster Earth Sciences Annual Report is now out. Thanks to Nat McCoy (ESCI Administrative Coordinator) and Dr. Meagen Pollock (ESCI Chair) for their hard work in assembling this record of all the activities over the past year. You can access a copy here.
With the 2026 FIFA World Cup underway, NASA air quality information is helping CDC support public health planning near tournament sites.NASA/Luna Posadas Nava
As the United States men's national team takes the field against Bosnia and Herzegovina ...
Two deadly earthquakes rocked northwestern Venezuela on June 24, 2026. In a remarkable sequence, a magnitude 7.2 foreshock was followed 39 seconds later by a magnitude 7.5 mainshock (the two separate USGS Shakemaps are shown below). The region has ha...
The resolution, spearheaded by Tajikistan (along with Peru and Bhutan), marks a historic first for Central Asia. It emphasizes the importance of Indigenous populations affected by glacier loss....
It is day two of the Round of 32. Check out the full bracket here.
Match 5: Colombia v. England
Colombia: 7.2% (3.26 million) live within 30 kilometers of a Holocene volcano; 30% (13.41 million) live within 100 kilometers of a Holocene volcano....
There is a version of Vancouver Island that few ever see.Not the emerald forests draped in moss, the crashing Pacific surf or the towering Douglas firs reaching skyward, but another world hidden beneath our feet. A world of silent limestone cham...
The Geodynamics programme of the General Assembly starts with your ideas. With the call for session proposals for the 2027 EGU General Assembly approaching, the Geodynamics Division President Laetitia Le Pourhiet shares her thoughts on what makes a successful session proposal, and how to help shape next year's scientific programme.
For some reason-and it may very well just be my personal bias-today's list has a lot of studies on active tectonics of the Americas and Central Asia. But then the western US and the Andes plus Central Asia make up a good portion of the total seismic moment release apart from subduction quakes, so perhaps this is not unusual. At some point I'd like to make a world map showing seismic moment release vs. number and distribution of scientific studies...Enjoy reading and please let me know if I've missed something.
On June 25, 2026, I attended a presentation by Dr. Kate Bulinski, Professor of Environmental Science at Bellermine University who talked about Faith and Science as part of the Theology on Tap Summer Speaker Series. It was a well attended talk after t...
Mathieu Hélie To find space for nature in cities, we first consider what kind of nature belongs in a city. The deep ocean and the Antarctic are natural ecosystems, but they are obviously not fit for a city. Human beings have been creating cities sin...
Categories: Europe; North America; People & Communities; Place & Design; RoundTable; Asia; Communities; Design; Green Infrastructure; Infrastructure; Planning; South America; What is urban nature?;
When LLMs were new, a participant in the Inclusive LU course I was teaching did a project where they explored using AI to generate podcasts about scientific articles to make them more accessible to the students. They generated a couple of podcasts on...
Authors: Rocío Anahí Mardones (@romardones_) & Natalia Noemí Rojas (@natiii_rojass)
About the authors: Rocío Anahí Mardones and Natalia Noemí Rojas are Geology students at the National University of Comahue (Neuquén, Argentina). This resear...
For those who know me--and many of you know me rather well--you'll know I carry around a very long bucket list.Some of it is wonderfully practical. There are places I ache to visit, museums I long to wander, fossils I dream of collecting with muddy...
Climate change is fueling an unprecedented number of extreme weather and climate disasters with dire consequences for human life and property. In the last decade, most counties across the United States have experienced multiple disaster events, including at least one federally declared disaster. States and local governments have a responsibility to adapt to these increasing disaster risks to improve community resilience and avoid an ever-growing magnitude of loss.
Welcome to the knockout rounds of the Volcano World Cup. Starting now it will be country versus country and the winner moves on. The loser? Well, they slink home and think of ways to get more volcanoes for 2030. I've broken the Round of 32 into 4 p...
We are excited to announce the 20th edition of Geodesy Campfire - Share Your Research in July. The Geodesy EGU Campfire Events "Share Your Research" give (early career) researchers the chance to talk about their work. We have two exciting talks by our guest speakers, Pierre Sakic and Iwona Kud?acik. Below, you can find the details of the topics awaiting us. We will have time to network after the presentations.
Like most of Europe, England has suffered through extreme heat this June. This is unsurprising, given what we know about global warming. But there are still those who wonder, has summer heat in England really gotten worse -- not just ... Continue re...
Good subsurface data has never been more valuable. From oil and gas exploration to carbon storage and offshore wind positioning, geological characterisation is essential, yet new data acquisition is becoming increasingly expensive. The case for reusing legacy datasets is clear. In 2021, the UK's North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) launched a cloud-based National Data Repository...
Congratulations on receiving the EGU 2026 ST Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Award for your outstanding contributions to our understanding of solar wind physics through observations from the Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter. What does this recognition mean to you personally, and how does it impact your work in this fascinating field?
Categories: Awardees in Solar-Terrestrial Research; coronal heating; early career researcher; EGU award; heliosphere; magnetic field; Parker Solar Probe; Solar Orbiter; solar wind; solar-terrestrial; space exploration; space weather; Sun;
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. For June, we are featuring the Ocean Science Division (OS). It is represented by the journal Ocean Science.