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News

Earth and space scientists in white lab coats speak at a rally on the steps of a building.
Posted inNews

Scientists Explore How Best to Communicate About Climate Change

by Randy Showstack 9 December 201915 October 2021

An AGU Fall Meeting session focuses on communicating with appropriate urgency about climate change.

Smartphones lay on a shake table to record accelerometer data.
Posted inNews

How to Turn Your Smartphone into an Earthquake Detector

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 8 December 20197 December 2022

A free smartphone app tracks earthquakes using your phone’s accelerometer. One day, the app could issue emergency warnings to those in danger.

Black-and-white photo of geologist Clyde Wahrhaftig, looking like a beatnik
Posted inNews

The Layered Legacy of Clyde Wahrhaftig

Korena Di Roma Howley, Science Writer by Korena Di Roma Howley 6 December 20193 November 2022

As the geologist’s beloved guidebook gets a digital makeover, his personal contributions to the field shed light on who he was as a scientist.

Profile of a radio telescope at sunset
Posted inNews

More Than Just Astronomy: Radio Telescopes for Geophysics

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 6 December 201924 May 2022

Linking an existing network of radio telescopes with satellite radar would make it possible to measure ground displacements in a globally consistent way, scientists propose.

Photo of Richard M. Thorne seated at a table
Posted inNews

Richard Mansergh Thorne (1942–2019)

by R. B. Horne and B. Tsurutani 4 December 201931 January 2022

A pioneering space plasma physicist who led the way in understanding how complex wave-particle interactions control Earth’s radiation belts and low-level auroral light emissions.

Brightly colored soil layers and a yardstick or ruler
Posted inNews

Looking for Prehistoric Pollen? Check the Floodplains

Mara Johnson-Groh, Science Writer by Mara Johnson-Groh 3 December 20197 February 2023

A new methodology calculates the soil properties most likely to preserve pollen.

Ice core with air bubbles
Posted inNews

Antarctic Ice Cores Offer a Whiff of Earth’s Ancient Atmosphere

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 27 November 201920 April 2022

Bubbles of greenhouse gases trapped in ice shed new light on an important climate transition that occurred about a million years ago.

Black-and-white photo of Hygiea, a nearly spherical celestial object
Posted inNews

Meet Hygiea, the Smallest Dwarf Planet in Our Solar System

Javier Barbuzano, Science Writer by Javier Barbuzano 26 November 201917 February 2023

New observations confirm that main asteroid belt object Hygiea is round. It now fulfills all the requirements to graduate from asteroid to dwarf planet.

Ethan Baxter examining garnet samples on an island cliff in Sifnos, Greece
Posted inNews

Using Garnets to Explore Arc Magma Oxidation

Rachel Crowell, Science Writer by Rachel Crowell 26 November 20195 October 2022

Samples collected from Greece help researchers piece together a scientific puzzle.

Lake shoreline with vegetation at sunset
Posted inNews

Dire and Drier Future for Lake Victoria

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 25 November 201931 October 2022

In the past, Lake Victoria dried out swiftly and often when rainfall was limited. Climate change might bring about those conditions again within a century.

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29 September 202525 September 2025
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29 September 202525 September 2025
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