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News

A collapsed portion of freeway after the Loma Prieta earthquake
Posted inNews

California Launches Nation’s First Earthquake Early Warning System

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 24 October 20196 October 2021

The country’s first publicly available, statewide warning system could give California residents crucial seconds to duck and cover before a quake.

Underwater photo of a whale skeleton
Posted inNews

Dead Whales, Dinosaurs, a Yeti, and Other Spooky News of the Week

by AGU 24 October 20198 November 2022

What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?

The White House foregrounded by red, white, and blue tulips
Posted inNews

Industry Leaders Dominate Trump’s Science and Tech Advisory Council

by Randy Showstack 23 October 201920 January 2023

The council’s launch, more than 2 and a half years into the Trump presidency, has an initial membership that is heavy on industry, with just one academic and no representatives from civil society.

Satellite image of California with wildfire smoke dominating its northwest corner
Posted inNews

Wildfire Smoke Traps Itself in Valleys

Javier Barbuzano, Science Writer by Javier Barbuzano 23 October 201922 October 2021

Simulations show how wildfire smoke increases atmospheric stability inside some valleys, creating a feedback loop that prevents its dispersion.

Bullet-shaped spaceship lands on Mars
Posted inNews

Modern Planet Protection Rules Recommended and Welcomed

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 22 October 201918 January 2022

Protocols for the Moon and Mars, human exploration, ocean worlds, and the private sector are all due for a major overhaul.

Physical world map showing the tectonic plate boundaries with their movement vectors and selected hot spots
Posted inNews

Podcast: Plate Tectonics, the Theory That Changed Earth Science

Nanci Bompey, assistant director of AGU’s media relations department by N. Bompey 22 October 20194 October 2022

Third Pod from the Sun talks with pioneering geophysicist Xavier Le Pichon about what it was like to be a young scientist challenging deeply held theories.

Four panelists sit on chairs on a dais
Posted inNews

Forum Focuses on Climate and the 2020 U.S. Election

by Randy Showstack 22 October 201921 March 2023

Former Trump environment official tries to defend the White House while others call for stronger action in the face of growing urgency.

Aerial images of Argentière glacier taken in 1919 and 2019
Posted inNews

Europe’s Mightiest Glaciers Are Melting

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 21 October 201928 July 2022

Here’s what a century of ice melt looks like on the Alps’ highest peak.

A gavel and a tray of test tubes
Posted inNews

Scientific Integrity Act Passes House Committee

by Randy Showstack 18 October 201927 March 2023

Legislation would require federal science agencies to adopt and enforce strong scientific integrity policies.

Side view of individual trees generated in a lidar image
Posted inNews

The Bigger They Are, the Harder They Fall

Richard Sima, freelance science writer by Richard J. Sima 18 October 201924 March 2023

New research tracking 1.8 million trees found that tall trees died at more than twice the rate of smaller ones toward the end of extreme and persistent drought.

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Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

More Bubbles Means More Variation in Ocean Carbon Storage

8 July 20258 July 2025
Editors' Highlights

Defining the Tropopause in Chemical Transport Models

8 July 20258 July 2025
Editors' Vox

Water Tracks: The Veins of Thawing Landscapes

25 June 202525 June 2025
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