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Caryl-Sue Micalizio

Darin Schwartz, a postdoctoral researcher at Boise State University, directs deployment of a rock dredge in the South Pacific from the deck of the R/V Atlantis in 2019.
Posted inAGU News

Into the Wild Blue Yonder

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 25 May 202326 May 2023

Fieldwork takes scientists from the eye of a hurricane to the depths of the sea.

The velocity of Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier in Greenland is affected by surface meltwater flow as well as seasonal ice fluctuation.
Posted inAGU News

The Fast and the Curious

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 24 April 202324 April 2023

Scientists get up to speed on phenomena ranging from fast moving atmospheric plasmas to a quickening glacial pace on Earth.

Wooden file cabinets. The photo is overlain by pale dots connected by thin lines.
Posted inAGU News

Your Databases Need a Reboot

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 27 March 202327 March 2023

Scientists are reassessing dated data in the time of the Cloud.

A 200-year-old oak tree was removed from a residential yard in De Pere, Wis., due to a split extending to the ground.
Posted inAGU News

New Discoveries in Old Records

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 22 February 202322 February 2023

Scientists take fresh approaches to seemingly familiar data in timbers and sediments.

Sand drains from an unnamed river into Murchison Sound close to Qaanaaq in northwestern Greenland
Posted inAGU News

What’s Up at the Bottom of the Ocean?

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 25 January 202326 January 2023

From isotopes to oil spills, sand mining to SMART cables, an array of science is grounded on the seafloor.

A fire burns a Siberian forest near Cherskiy, Russia, in 2020.
Posted inAGU News

A Forest, for the Trees

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 22 December 202222 December 2022

Arrays of technologies and innovative research are helping scientists better understand forests, fires, and the future of our shared landscape.

Illustration elements inspired by various Eos articles and AGU scientific disciplines
Posted inAGU News

Science Leads the Future, and the Future Is Now

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 21 November 20223 January 2023

In our annual double issue, Eos shares how scientists are defining the future with their work today.

A wave washes ashore on a beach in Bali, Indonesia.
Posted inAGU News

Making Waves

by Caryl-Sue Micalizio 26 September 202227 September 2022

Sources of tsunamis are undersea, underground, and under the microscope in our October issue.

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 2 3
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

Simplicity May Be the Key to Understanding Soil Moisture

23 May 202523 May 2025
Editors' Highlights

Creep Cavitation May Lead to Earthquake Nucleation

22 May 202521 May 2025
Editors' Vox

Decoding Crop Evapotranspiration

6 May 20256 May 2025
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