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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

Pleurojulus Millipede Fossil

This image is of a Pleurojulus sp (Fritsch, 1899) millipede fossil on display at Natural History Museum Vienna (Naturhistorisches Museum Wien) (August 2024). It dates to the Late Carboniferous Period. The fossil was found in Ný?any Czech Republi...
Categories: carboniferous; czech republic; millipede; Naturhistorisches Museum Wien;

No safety net: Insurance starts to go away

Resource Insights | 15 June, 2025
Ever since the words "insurance premium" began appearing on contracts in the Republic of Venice in 1255, modern global trade and now our broader society depend on insurance to mitigate risk of loss to enterprises and individuals for...
Categories: None

Egypt’s Mediterranean Coast

An astronaut photographed Alexandria's coastal development, agricultural zones, harbors, and salt ponds. Read More......
Categories: None

Agave season

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 14 June, 2025
It's that time of year when the family collects agave sightings around our Albuquerque neighborhood, detouring our drives and walks and bike rides to follow their progress, sharing locations and pictures whenever we're out and about.
Categories: anthropocene;

Öræfajökull and Vatnajökull, Iceland May High May 2025 Snow Line

Iceland experienced an unusually warm and sunny May, with record high temperatures averaging 10 C above average. This led to a rapid rise in the snow line to elevations more typical of late June than May on the ice caps in southern Iceland, here both Vatnajökull and ?-ræfajökull. We use Sentinel images (Mauri Pelto annotated) and photographs from (Jill Pelto) to illustrate. The University of Maine Sea to Sky Experience explored Iceland in May, and Jill as the artist faculty for the program had a chance to see Iceland with blue sky days. . Most days during the my two weeks in Iceland, most days were full sun. Most days had high temperatures from 10-15 C, with the heatwave reaching into the low 20 C range, rare even for summer here. The lower parts of outlet glaciers already had lots of bare ice, even though melt season should not really have begun yet. Locals were shocked by the weather, and most I heard from were not happy about it, even though it was "nice" out.
Categories: Glacier Observations; iceland glacier retreat; Fjallsjokull snow line; iceland; skalafellsjokull snow line; snow line rise Iceland 2025; vatnajokul ice cap volcano;

A Seaweed Economy Tied to the Tides

Farming of this valuable product has become common in recent decades in the waters of Tanzania's Pemba Island. Read More......
Categories: None

Earthquake science illuminates landslide behavior

Temblor Earth News | 13 June, 2025
Slow-moving landslides "are really mysterious because they get saturated and they flow. But they don't typically fail catastrophically," Roering says. "These slow-movers are really interesting because rather than evacuating all that unstable material, they just kind of progressively creep."
Categories: Discoveries; Earthquake Insights; Temblor;

The Vredefort impact

Volcano Cafe | 13 June, 2025
The centre of South Africa is an amazing place. The long drive from Cape Town in-land is exciting for the first two hours, while you climbing up through the mountains, past vineyards and valleys full of fynbos. Once on the high interior plateau of So...
Categories: History of the Earth; South Africa; Asteroids; Cradle of Humankind; craters; Gold; impact structure; Johannesburg; Vredefort; Witwatersrand;

Peaks and troughs

Planetary Society Weblog | 13 June, 2025
The Sun's activity is peaking, while NASA's budget is facing historic lows....
Categories: None

Fallowed Fields Are Fueling California’s Dust Problem

AGU Editors' Vox | 13 June, 2025
California produces more than a third of the vegetables and three quarters of the fruits and nuts in the United States. But water constraints are leaving more and more fields unplanted, or "fallowed," particularly in the state's famed farming hub, the Central Valley.
Categories: News; aerosols & particles; agriculture; California; climate; drought; dust; erosion & weathering; Health & Ecosystems; land use; public health; soils;

Queer Quarterly: LGBTQIA+ Inclusion during fieldwork

EGU Geolog | 13 June, 2025
It's pride month and we are delighted to feature a post on queer inclusion in fieldwork written by members of EGU's pride group. Queer Quarterly is the blog series of the EGU pride group, an LGBTQIA+ team of geoscientists engaged to uphold and improve the rights of the community at EGU. This quarterly post is based on the EGU Webinar Uneven Ground 2 on improving fieldwork accessibility for LGBTQIA+ people.
Categories: Accessibility and inclusivity at EGU; pride; EGU Pride Group; fieldwork accessibility; fieldwork safety; global protections; inclusive research practices; LGBTQ+ rights; LGBTQIA+ inclusion; Pride Month; queer geoscientists; queer visibility in science;

Ammonite Fossil at St. Stephen's Cathedral

  St. Stephen's Cathedral is located in Vienna, Austria. In 1137 the first Romanesque church was built at the site. The second Romanesque church was built 1200-1225. In 1433 the South Tower was completed and the North Tower finished by 1578. The f...
Categories: ammonite; austria; church; jurassic; rosso ammonitico formation; vienna;

Quoting Simon Willison

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 12 June, 2025
I really do feel like blogging is onto its second wind. The amount of influence you can have on the world by consistently blogging about a subject is just as high today as it was back in the 2000s when blogging first started.
Categories: mind;

Uranium in Nova Scotia

Earth Science Society | 12 June, 2025
Attached is the powerpoint presentation that I used in Lake Paul, Tatamagouche and Wolfville in early June 2025 as part of the campaign to stop the Nova Scotia Provincial Government from allowing Uranium exploration.
Categories: critical minerals; Energy; mining; Nova Scotia; Canada; earth science; environment; geology; geoscience;

Winter Arrives Early in Lesotho and South Africa

A powerful weather system brought heavy snow to southern African mountains, plus high winds and flooding to the lowlands. Read More......
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Brad Udall on climate change and the Colorado River

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 12 June, 2025
Via Allen Best, Brad Udall's critically important comments at last week's Getches-Wilkinson Colorado River conference:
Categories: Colorado River; water;

Coverage Factors Affect Urban CO2 Monitoring from Space

AGU Editors' Vox | 12 June, 2025
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a key driver of global climate change and the ability to monitor human-based emissions of this gas is crucial for quantifying the effectiveness of carbon-reduction policies. In recent years, space-based platforms like the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO-2 and OCO-3) missions have provided atmospheric CO2 observations with near-global coverage and efforts to ingest these data into local, regional, and national carbon accounting methodologies have been successful. However, space-based observations are influenced by physical and environmental factors that affect their coverage.
Categories: Editors' Highlights; AGU Advances; carbon dioxide; cities; climate; Climate Change; everything atmospheric; satellites;

Field of Soy Dreams in Illinois 

The Midwest state has flat land, fertile soils, and the nation's largest soybean harvest.   Read More......
Categories: None

MR 2025: Building Mobility, Resilience and Connection in a Changing Climate

State of the Planet | 11 June, 2025
At MR2025, local and international scientists, policymakers, academics and community members will join representatives from different sectors to discuss climate mobility, adaptation and wellbeing....
Categories: Climate; Natural Disasters; Alex de Sherbinin; CIESIN; cs highlights; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; managed retreat; managed retreat conference;

Acceleration in Other Data Sets

Open Mind | 11 June, 2025
I've posted recently about adjusting global surface temperature for known influences (el Niño, volcanoes, and solar variation), which reduces the noise level and improves the precision of trend estimates. This in turn enables us to detect trend ch...
Categories: Global Warming; climate change;

NOAA’s Climate Website May Soon Shut Down

AGU Editors' Vox | 11 June, 2025
Climate.gov, NOAA's portal to the work of their Climate Program Office, will likely soon shut down as most of the staff charged with maintaining it were fired on 31 May, according to The Guardian. The site is funded through a large NOAA contract that also includes other programs. A NOAA manager told now-former employees of a directive "from above" demanding that the contract remove funding for the 10-person climate.gov team.
Categories: Research & Developments; climate; Climate Change; culture & policy; data management; NOAA;

Storm Duo Churns Over the Pacific

Hurricane Barbara and Tropical Storm Cosme lined up off the western coast of Mexico. Read More......
Categories: None

Rethinking Energy Systems in the Age of AI

State of the Planet | 10 June, 2025
To view data centers as mainly energy-intensive off-takers misses their potential as digital and energy infrastructure multipliers....
Categories: Energy; Viewpoints; artificial intelligence; Clean energy; Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment; green energy; Lisa Sachs;

EXPLORING WRANGELLIA: HAIDA GWAII

Fossil Huntress | 10 June, 2025
Misty shores, moss covered forests, a rich cultural history, dappled light, fossils and the smell of salt air--these are my memories of Haida Gwaii.The archipelago of Haida Gwaii lays at the western edge of the continental shelf due west of the cent...
Categories: art; Blog; find; first; fossil; fossils; go; Haida; HISTORY; indigenous; map; nation; palaeontology; paleontology; science; sexy; to; trip; where;

June Puzzler

Earth Matters | 10 June, 2025
Every month on Earth Matters, we offer a puzzling satellite image. The June 2025 puzzler is shown above. Your challenge is to use the comments section to tell us where it is, what we are looking at, and why it is interesting. How t...
Categories: EO's Satellite Puzzler; Earth; NASA; puzzler;

Latest: No chatbots please, we’re scientists

Latest: New paper! Prediction of anthropogenic debris and its association with geomorphology in US urban streams

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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