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- No chatbots please, we’re scientists
- Golden spike or no golden spike – we are living in the Anthropocene
- We are late bending the climate change curve – but bending it still matters
- The changing picture of the Martian core
- Rivers might not need plants to meander
- Has Earth’s mantle always worked like it does today?
- How the UK’s tectonic past is key to its seismic present
- A new recipe for Large Igneous Provinces: just add BIF, then wait a couple of hundred million years
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For lot's more videos on soil moisture topics, see Drs Selker and Or's text-book support videos https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoMb5YOZuaGtn8pZyQMSLuQ/playlists
[…] Announcing STORMS | Highly Allochthonous on Recent News […]
Category Archives: bloggery
Earth Science Erratics: the kinder, gentler way to start geoblogging
Is one of your New Year’s Resolutions this year to start a science blog? We’re here to help. Continue reading
Anne’s stream of adventures in 2010
When you are a hydrologist, all the world is your watershed. Continue reading
Chris’s travels in 2010
It’s travel meme time! Following the example Silver Fox, Garry Hayes, Callan Bentley and Jess Ball, here’s a summary of my travels this year. If nothing else, it’s a good chance to (re)post pretty photos. In January, a trip to … Continue reading
12 Months of Highly Allochthonous
While one year is but a proverbial blink of the eye to those who think in geologic time, we’re still indulging in some year end reflections and looking back on our posts from 2010. On the off chance you want … Continue reading
Participate in the AGU panel on geoblogging, even if you are not at the meeting
Later this afternoon, your friendly neighborhood geobloggers will convene at the AGU meeting for a panel on the payoffs and perils of blogging. Panelists include both Chris and Anne, Brian Romans from Clastic Detritus, Jess Ball from Magma Cum Laude, … Continue reading
Nice plan for content warnings on Mastodon and the Fediverse. Now you need a Mastodon/Fediverse button on this blog.