• About
  • Sections
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
  • About
  • Sections
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
Skip to content
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
Eos

Eos

Science News by AGU

Support Eos
Sign Up for Newsletter
  • About
  • Sections
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos

Editors’ Vox

Posted inEditors' Vox

Multiple Choices Exist for Changing Ocean Oxygen Concentrations

by P. Brewer 14 May 201827 January 2023

Widespread declines in ocean oxygen concentrations are now being reported with authors offering quite different explanations. Which ones are correct?

Posted inEditors' Vox

Methane, Climate Change, and Our Uncertain Future

by J. Dean 11 May 201829 September 2021

Methane is generally considered secondary to carbon dioxide in its importance to climate change, but what role might methane play in the future if global temperatures continue to rise?

Posted inEditors' Vox

Hurricanes and the Sea: It Takes Two to Tango

by Kristopher B. Karnauskas and Lei Zhou 10 May 201816 December 2021

A new special issue of JGR: Oceans reveals the rich relationship between the ocean and tropical cyclones.

Space weather and infrastructure Credit NASA
Posted inEditors' Vox

White House Seeks Input to Update Space Weather Strategy

by S. Jonas and W. Murtagh 8 May 201813 October 2021

Space weather can affect many technologies and infrastructures that society relies on. The White House seeks public input to inform the next steps to better prepare the Nation for this hazard.

Posted inEditors' Vox

It’s So UnFAIR!

by Ankur R. Desai 2 May 201812 January 2023

A recent paper in JGR: Biogeosciences demonstrates that sharing data has positive benefits not just for the scientific community but also for the one doing the sharing.

Posted inEditors' Vox

On Integrating Sedimentology and Hydrogeology in Streambeds

by D. Partington, C. T. Simmons, R. Therrien and P. Brunner 27 April 20183 March 2023

A new modeling blueprint seeks to unify sedimentology, hydrology, and hydrogeology in the modeling of streambeds.

Posted inEditors' Vox

Deep Learning: A Next-Generation Big-Data Approach for Hydrology

by C. Shen 25 April 20189 March 2023

What can Artificial Intelligence offer hydrologic research? Could deep learning one day become part of hydrology itself?

Native Prairie in East Central North Dakota
Posted inEditors' Vox

Diagnosing the Warm Bias in the Central United States

by A. Steiner 23 April 201815 February 2023

A set of four papers published in JGR: Atmospheres present results from a project investigating why models predict warmer surface temperatures than are observed in the central United States.

Posted inEditors' Vox

Societal Impacts Collection Continues to Grow

by Jenny Lunn and Paige Wooden 18 April 20187 January 2022

There have been further additions to the highly successful “Earth and Space Science is Essential for Society” collection of commentaries.

Marine mollusk shells record the magnitude of the radiocarbon marine reservoir effect in their habitat.
Posted inEditors' Vox

Radiocarbon in the Oceans

by E. Q. Alves 17 April 201827 January 2022

Offsets in radiocarbon concentration within the ocean or between the ocean and the atmosphere are particularly useful proxies for a variety of studies.

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 28 29 30 31 32 … 46 Older posts
A view of a Washington, D.C., skyline from the Potomac River at night. The Lincoln Memorial (at left) and the Washington Monument (at right) are lit against a purple sky. Over the water of the Potomac appear the text “#AGU24 coverage from Eos.”

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

Storm Prediction Gets 10 Times Faster Thanks to AI

20 May 202520 May 2025
Editors' Highlights

Inferring River Discharge from Google Earth Images

20 May 202515 May 2025
Editors' Vox

Decoding Crop Evapotranspiration

6 May 20256 May 2025
Eos logo at left; AGU logo at right

About Eos
ENGAGE
Awards
Contact

Advertise
Submit
Career Center
Sitemap

© 2025 American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved Powered by Newspack