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GW SIG Seminar, 17 June 2026

Notes from the field | 11 June, 2026
Physics of the Cosmos...Physics of the Cosmos CommunityGW SIG Seminar, 17...AboutCommunityProgram Analysis Group (PhysPAG)Science GroupsMeetingsCosmic PathfindersScience GapsEarly Career WorkshopsOpportunitiesMissionsStudiesNews & EventsResources  ...
Categories: Physics of the Cosmos;

Soccer Meets Space Science

Researchers tested soccer balls aboard the International Space Station to study how internal mass affects motion and stability in microgravity....
Categories: None

SWIMMING IN ORDOVICIAN SEAS

Fossil Huntress | 11 June, 2026
Ordovician SeasOrdovician seas, some 485 to 444 million years ago, were gloriously alive. If the Cambrian was Earth's exuberant dress rehearsal for complex life, the Ordovician was opening night. The oceans swelled with innovation, diversit...
Categories: creatures; death; lived; ordovician; scorpions; sea; seas; sex; taxes; trilobites; what; who;

Volcano World Cup – Group A

Eruptions | 11 June, 2026
Volcano World Cup - Group A Remember to cast your vote for Group A at the bottom of this post! Pool A Mexico - 76/30/9/5 - Popocatépetl Popocatépetl in Mexico. Image by Russ Bowling / Flickr. Mexico has a lot of volcanoes. Some...
Categories: Volcano World Cup; Czechia; eruption; geology; Mexico; science; South Africa; South Korea; volcano;

How Do Glacial Ecosystems Respond to Climate Change?

State of the Planet | 11 June, 2026
Microbiologist Arwyn Edwards discusses the complex role of microbial life in glacial ecosystems and the impact of climate change on his field....
Categories: GlacierHub; glaciers; Greenland; Greenland Ice Sheet; Marco Tedesco; Norway;

Latest research emphasises climate-related subsidence risk to millions of British homes

Projected number of properties highly likely or extremely likely to be affected by clay shrink-swell due to climate change compared with London boroughs at greatest risk of being affected by 2070. BGS © UKRI 2026.
Categories: BGS news; climate change; geoclimate; shrink-swell; subsidence;

Serendipity maximisation

GEOExPro | 11 June, 2026
"When people make a creaming curve for a basin," says Ian Longley from GIS-Pax, "they draw a line, and say that's going to be the future for the basin." "The problem with that methodolo­gy is, when you predict to find, let's say, 500 MMbbl in ten years, there is noth­ing to inform you about whether...
Categories: Oil & Gas; GIS-pax;

Photo: Insect Camouflage

 I nearly missed this insect as I was sipping my evening coffee.
Categories: evolution; natural selection;

CO2 … Good News and Bad News

Open Mind | 10 June, 2026
Zeke Hausfather has reported that since 2014, CO2 emissions have leveled off. Not only that, he has estimated how much that has reduced the atmospheric CO2 load, compared to what is would have been if CO2 emissions kept increasing like ... Continue r...
Categories: Global Warming;

The evolution of the International Whaling Commission – from  whaling quotas to whale conservation

Southern Fried Science | 10 June, 2026
For decades, the International Whaling Commission (IWC) was defined by a single, highly polarized debate: the battle between pro-whaling and anti-whaling nations over commercial catch quotas. Today, however, the landscape of the IWC has radically evo...
Categories: Conservation; Featured; Science; bycatch; cetacean; Indian Ocean Sanctuary; international whaling commission; IWC; marine mammal; marine mammal bycatch; marine mammal conservation; SOCEr; South Atlantic Whale Sanctuary; Southern Ocean Sanctuary; State of the Cetacean environment report; whaing; whale; whale conservation; whale sanctuary;

Train Ride to NASA Kennedy for Artemis III Booster Segments

A train transports eight booster motor segments for the SLS (Space Launch System rocket) that will power NASA's Artemis III mission from Northrop Grumman's Railyard Shipping Facility in Corinne, Utah, June 2, to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in F...
Categories: None

UK Court Recognizes Climate Migration as a Human Right: FA v. the Secretary of State for the Home Department (2025)

Climate Law Blog | 10 June, 2026
In November 2025, one of the first climate-related asylum appeals was reviewed in the UK, by the UK's First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) and approved on human rights grounds. In FA v Secretary of State for the Home Department (SSHD), the appellant (FA) argued that climate-related hardship, poor mental health relating to the loss of his house to a typhoon, and family (partner) separation would constitute a violation of his human rights if he were returned to the Philippines, particularly the right to private and family life (Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)). The Tribunal Judge determined that the individual would be allowed to remain in the UK, preventing his removal back to his home country, the Philippines. This blog post discusses how this case fits in with the UK legal system, other European climate migration cases, and broader legal approaches to climate-related migration to receiving countries. It proceeds by providing a background on the UK asylum system and the FA case, how the case tackled the question of 'climate refugees', how the case relates to decisions by other domestic courts, and pathways forward for potential climate-related protections for those seeking asylum in the UK. With the latter, it considers the impact of a potential case at the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR).
Categories: Climate Litigation; Cross-cutting Issues; Climate Migration;

SPIRIT BEARS OF CANADA'S WEST COAST

Fossil Huntress | 10 June, 2026
Mist clings to the moss-draped cedars, and the river below churns with the silver flash of salmon fighting upstream. Then, out of the shadows, a pale figure steps onto the slick stones--a spirit bear, its coat glowing against the emerald forest...
Categories: bear; conservation; HISTORY; spirit;

A STEP Grant update: Growing our understanding of deep-space agriculture

Planetary Society Weblog | 10 June, 2026
The 2023 round of The Planetary Society's Science and Technology Empowered by the Public (STEP) Grants awarded $50,000 USD to a team led by Dr. Andrew Palmer of the Florida Institute of Technology to study deep-space agriculture to address the chal...
Categories: None

La Hougue Bie

The Smell of Water | 10 June, 2026
Vorfreude - noun - German - Joyful anticipation In the late 1990's I was reading a book on European megaliths and saw a picture of a large mound with a pair of ancient chapels on its summit, beneath the mound was a large neolithic passage ...
Categories: Archaeology; Jersey; Prehistory; Celtic Coin Hoard; Channel Islands; Cup Marked Stones; La Hougue Bie; La Pouquelaye de Faldouet; Megalithic; Mound; Neolithic; Passage Grave;

(Almost) everything wrong with: Journey to the Centre of the Earth

EGU Geodynamics Division | 10 June, 2026
 Spoiler warning!   Have you ever watched a science fiction movie and thought, huh, I wonder if that is actually possible? Now, I hope by the time the dinosaurs turned up during this film, that this transient thought had departed from your mind, bu...
Categories: Uncategorised; Earth sciences; geodynamics; geology; how science works; movies; science fiction; tectonophysics;

Collecting, Processing, and Presenting in the Age of AI

AI changed everything, also the way we search for literature, create figures, and write summaries. Teaching a course on collecting, processing and presenting geoscientific information and having published two editions of a book on the topic, it was t...
Categories: Home;

Tyndall’s Trail of Bergs

Elegant Figures | 9 June, 2026
The Southern Patagonian Icefield is the largest expanse of ice in the Southern Hemisphere outside of Antarctica. The mass of glacial ice extends hundreds of kilometers along the spine of the Andes, feeding dozens of dynamic outlet glaciers that grind their way down from higher elevations. Many of these rivers of ice terminate in the sea or in proglacial lakes.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Ice & Glaciers; International Space Station (ISS);

Remembering Geoffrey C.P. King (1943-2026)

Temblor Earth News | 9 June, 2026
Between 1984 and 1996, British geophysicist Geoff King and I wrote eight papers together. We worked in the field in California, Nevada and Greece, and we worked in each other's offices and homes in Menlo Park, Cambridge, Boulder and Strasbourg.
Categories: Earthquake Insights; Essays; Publications; Temblor;

What we know about Artemis III: NASA announces crew

The next step in NASA's plan to bring humankind back to the Moon....
Categories: None

Guest Blog: Bursting the Academic Bubble: Why Scientists Must Bridge the Gap Between Research and Policy

Bursting the Academic Bubble: Why Scientists Must Bridge the Gap Between Research and Policy Jelis J. Sostre Cortés, AGU-sponsored CASE workshop participant and PhD candidate at the Georgia Institute of Technology As someone who was born and raised in Puerto Rico, I have been exposed to countless natural hazards. I have witnessed firsthand how a disconnect between scientists and policymakers...
Categories: Policy; Value of science;

How to Read the Volcano World Cup Country Info

Eruptions | 9 June, 2026
As we start the 2026 Volcano World Cup I wanted to give everyone a primer in how to read the country information you will see across the competition. Think of it like the chyron used when a batter steps to the plate in baseball -- it has all the imp...
Categories: Volcano World Cup; volcano; volcanoes;

You Asked: What Exactly Is a ‘Super’ El Niño?

State of the Planet | 9 June, 2026
Columbia Climate School experts explain what a strong El Niño could mean for the planet this year....
Categories: Climate; Natural Disasters; Water; Andrew J. Kruczkiewicz; El Niño; El Niño-Southern Oscillation; ENSO; Mingfang Ting; Muhammad Azhar Ehsan; NOAA; You Asked;

San Francisco’s Metropolitan Mosaic

Elegant Figures | 8 June, 2026
A period of unsettled weather brought scattered showers and thunderstorms to California's Bay Area on May 27, 2026. That afternoon, a break in the clouds left downtown San Francisco and nearby communities beneath mostly cloud-free skies, allowing an astronaut aboard the International Space Station to take this photograph.
Categories: International Space Station (ISS); Earth Observatory; Land Use; Urban Development;

The great Hawaii earthquake of 1868

Volcano Cafe | 8 June, 2026
It was perhaps the most destructive event in Hawai'i in memory. And it was raised again in the blog comments recently. It turns out we have published a post on it in the past, written by Hector: https://www.volcanocafe.org/mauna-loa-from-1852-to-18...
Categories: Hawaii; Earthquake; Eruption; Kilauea; Mauna Loa; Volcanic Disasters;

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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