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LATEST FROM THE GEOBLOGOSPHERE:

NASA Volunteers Study Biofilm Adaptability in Space

Elegant Figures | 13 March, 2026
Biofilms are communities of microorganisms that stick to one another and also adhere to a nearby surface. They are intricately associated with life on Earth, enabling functions essential to human and plant systems.
Categories: Citizen Science; Biological & Physical Sciences;

Geology of the National Parks in Pictures - Wind Cave National Park

The Geology P.A.G.E | 13 March, 2026
My next post about the Geology of the National Parks Through Pictures is from our move across the country from Utah to New York. Along the way we visited 13 National Parks as well as some other sites. This was the 8th National Park along the way.
Categories: National parks; South Dakota;

The view from the top

Planetary Society Weblog | 13 March, 2026
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory has a great view of the Cosmos -- and of the Earth below....
Categories: None

Bringing Climate Research to New York City’s Classrooms

State of the Planet | 13 March, 2026
The NYC Mid-Winter Climate Institute brought together K-12 educators to identify meaningful entry points for climate education lessons in their classrooms and beyond....
Categories: Climate; Education; Sustainability; Climate and Society alumni; Climate Live; Earth Networks; education news; K12; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; Laurel Zaima-Sheehy; MA in Climate and Society; Margie Turrin; NYC; Radhika Iyengar;

Eruption at Mayon

Elegant Figures | 12 March, 2026
At any given moment, about 20 volcanoes on Earth are actively erupting. Often among them is Mayon--the most active volcano in the Philippines. The nearly symmetrical stratovolcano, on Luzon Island near the Albay and Lagonoy gulfs, rises more than 2,400 meters (8,000 feet) above sea level.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Earth; Landsat 8 / LDCM (Landsat Data Continuity Mission); Natural Disasters; Volcanoes;

Tiny NASA Spacecraft Delivers Exoplanet Mission’s First Images

Elegant Figures | 12 March, 2026
With the first images from the spacecraft now in hand, the team behind NASA's Star-Planet Activity Research CubeSat, or SPARCS, is ready to begin charting the energetic lives of the galaxy's most common stars to help answer one of humanity's most profound questions: Which distant worlds beyond our solar system might be habitable? 
Categories: Astrobiology; Exoplanet Science; Jet Propulsion Laboratory;

Dust Outbreak Reaches Europe

Elegant Figures | 11 March, 2026
Winter winds lofted clouds of dust from the Sahara Desert, carrying it north toward the Mediterranean and dispersing it widely across Europe in March 2026. When the dust combined with moisture-laden weather systems, a dirty rain fell in parts of Spain, France, and the United Kingdom.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Dust Storms; Earth's Atmosphere;

Earth’s “Missing” Billion Years: Study Links the Great Unconformity to Early Tectonics

State of the Planet | 11 March, 2026
New findings shed light on a widespread gap in the geologic record, where more than a billion years of Earth's history appear to have been erased....
Categories: Earth Sciences; Press Release; cs highlights; Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences; Geology; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; National Academy of Sciences; Nicholas Christie-Blick; research;

AI/ML STIG Lecture Series, 16 March 2026

Elegant Figures | 11 March, 2026
Cosmic Origins...Cosmic Origins CommunityAI/ML STIG Lecture Series, 16...AboutCommunityExecutive CommitteeScience GroupsNews & EventsCosmic PathfindersEarly Career WorkshopOpportunitiesMissionsStudiesNews & EventsResources  ...
Categories: Cosmic Origins Program;

Why do some planets have rings and others don't?

Planetary Society Weblog | 11 March, 2026
The giant planets of our Solar System all have rings, as do some dwarf planets and even asteroids. So why don't Mercury, Venus, Earth, or Mars?...
Categories: None

Cold Winter, Hot Winter

Open Mind | 11 March, 2026
For Americans living in the eastern half of the country, this winter seemed quite cold, and for some states winter temperature was indeed colder than average (average defined by the period from 1895 to the present). Those states are shaded ... Contin...
Categories: Global Warming;

Quoting Jeff Kightlinger and Jim Lochhead

Inkstain (John Fleck) | 11 March, 2026
As the former CEOs of two of the largest water utilities using water from the Colorado River, we have been deeply engaged in interstate and federal negotiations on the river for over 30 years. Those negotiations were tough, but the basin states ultimately reached agreement, including reducing California's use of water by 800,000 acre-feet and adopting the current set of operating rules for the federal reservoirs.
Categories: Colorado River; water;

Curiosity Blog, Sols 4825-4831: Exploring the Borderlands

Elegant Figures | 10 March, 2026
Written by William Farrand, Senior Research Scientist, Space Science Institute
Categories: Blogs;

Spotlite: Where can you find phytoplankton?

Elegant Figures | 10 March, 2026
In this NASA Spotlite, NASA interns challenge the question: Where can you find phytoplankton? Through a simple investigation, viewers learn how to collect water samples and observe them to look for phytoplankton.
Categories: None

Antarctica Undergoes ‘Greenlandification’ As Ice Melt Accelerates

State of the Planet | 10 March, 2026
Scientists have found that Antarctica's ice loss is increasing rapidly, mirroring the melting of its northern counterpart, Greenland....
Categories: GlacierHub; Antarctica; glacier loss; Greenland; Greenland Ice Sheet; Jacqueline Austermann; Jonathan Kingslake; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory;

Shades of a Lunar Eclipse

Elegant Figures | 9 March, 2026
On March 3, 2026, Earth lined up directly between the Moon and the Sun, casting its shadow on the full Moon. The total lunar eclipse was visible throughout the Americas, East Asia, Australia, and the Pacific. Skygazers in those parts of the world may have witnessed a "Blood Moon," when the dimmed lunar surface temporarily turned an orange-red color.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Earth at Night; Sun-Earth Interactions; Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS);

APS Global Physics Summit, March-April 2026

Elegant Figures | 9 March, 2026
Chair: Bernard Kelly, University of Maryland Baltimore County
Categories: Physics of the Cosmos;

Lake Coatepeque

Elegant Figures | 8 March, 2026
Just inland from the Pacific coast of El Salvador, the striking blue waters of Lake Coatepeque fill part of a caldera of the same name. An astronaut aboard the International Space Station took this photo of the lake and surrounding terrain on February 10, 2026, as the station passed over Central America.
Categories: Earth Observatory; International Space Station (ISS); Topography; Volcanoes;

Iran war: What we're in for and why logic is your friend

Resource Insights | 8 March, 2026
In trying to decipher the events of this war, logic is your friend:
Categories: None

Global Warming has Accelerated

Open Mind | 6 March, 2026
My paper with Stefan Rahmstorf showing that global warming has accelerated was published in Geophysical Research Letters today. The main result is that global warming is NOT proceeding at the same old rate it has been since 1975. It's going ... Con...
Categories: Global Warming;

Journey Through the Heliosphere: The Habitable Zone

Elegant Figures | 6 March, 2026
Two pages extracted from the "Journey Through the Heliosphere: The Sun-Earth System in Color" booklet. The pages explore the Habitable Zone, and include a note relating the topic to indigenous Alaskan languages.
Categories: Uncategorized;

Art Meets Science at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

State of the Planet | 6 March, 2026
Lamont's 2025 Research as Art exhibit provides a platform for scientists to share their research in a creative way....
Categories: Climate; Earth Sciences; art; climate art; climate change; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory; Paul Olsen; research;

Canadian Robotic Arm Releases Japan’s Spacecraft for Departure

Elegant Figures | 6 March, 2026
At 12 p.m. EST, JAXA's (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's) HTV-X1 cargo spacecraft was released from the International Space Station's Canadarm2 robotic arm, which earlier detached it from the Earth-facing port of the orbiting laboratory's Harmony module. At the time of release, the station was flying about 260 miles over the Pacific Ocean. 
Categories: International Space Station (ISS); ISS Research;

Stellar death and an Artemis overhaul

Planetary Society Weblog | 6 March, 2026
A planetary nebula teaches us about how stars die, and a new Artemis architecture changes our plans for Mars....
Categories: None

Ailing “Megaberg” Sparks Surge of Microscopic Life

Elegant Figures | 5 March, 2026
Iceberg A-23A has had a more eventful run than most of the large Antarctic icebergs that have calved from the continent's ice shelves in recent decades. Over its winding, forty-plus-year journey, the "megaberg" spent decades grounded in the Weddell Sea before drifting north, twirling in an ocean vortex for months, and nearly colliding with an island in 2025.
Categories: Earth Observatory; Carbon Cycle; Ice & Glaciers; Oceans; Water Blooms;

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

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