The Authors
Search this blog
Categories
Archives
-
Recent Posts
- 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
-
Recent Comments
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 […]
Tag Archives: AGU
Where is Anne at AGU?
I’ve abandoned my family for the week and flown to San Francisco to join ~26,000 geoscientists at this year’s American Geophysical Union meeting. It’s a big, spectacular, and exciting meeting, and I might have gotten a little too excited about … Continue reading
A ton of 2+ year-old AGU journal articles are now open access!
All you have to do is wait two years after publication… Continue reading
My AGU Posters: a visual history
It’s a miracle! In an amazing (and probably entirely serendipitous) feat of organisation, I find myself printing my poster for the AGU 2012 Fall Meeting a whole 3 days before I fly to San Francisco. Since I am generally more … Continue reading
How the conference presentation was done
Any resemblance to the task of producing my poster for AGU is purely coincidental.
Geobloggers – why do you blog?
For geology bloggers, one of the most interesting, and encouraging, things about 2010 was that two big geological organisations – the Geological Society of America and the American Geophysical Union – have started to grasp, and exploit, the potential of … Continue reading
Nice plan for content warnings on Mastodon and the Fediverse. Now you need a Mastodon/Fediverse button on this blog.