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News

Three people wearing orange safety jackets stand on the deck of a ship in the Arctic.
Posted inNews

Swedish Icebreaker Is the First to Dig Into Greenland’s Remote Victoria Fjord

by Grace van Deelen 13 September 202413 September 2024

Data collected aboard Oden will shed light on the dynamics of the Greenland Ice Sheet.

A cross section of a core taken from Earth’s mantle, is seen under a microscope.
Posted inNews

Lost City’s Plumbing Exposed by the Longest Mantle Core Ever Drilled

by Nathaniel Scharping 12 September 202412 September 2024

The core, which is 71% complete, reveals millions of years of geologic history and the plumbing underlying hydrothermal vents.

A jet airplane at an airport in hazy conditions
Posted inNews

Lots of Dust Gets Sucked Up by Jet Engines

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 12 September 202412 September 2024

Changing flight times and holding altitudes could substantially reduce the amount of wear-inducing dust ingested by jet engines.

A photo of a large orange buoy on a boat with several people gathered around it
Posted inNews

Scientists Are “Gobsmacked” by the Variability of Seafloor Currents

by Andrew Chapman 11 September 202411 September 2024

The speed and direction of deep currents off Mozambique’s coast are more subject to change than scientists expected.

Large and small craters on the surface of Mars
Posted inNews

Parts of Mars Might Be Younger Than We Thought

by Jonathan O’Callaghan 10 September 202410 September 2024

Data from InSight’s seismometer suggest more impactors strike the Red Planet than expected.

A desert landscape vegetated by dry grass and shrubs.
Posted inNews

Fiber-Optic Cables Used to Measure Changing Soil Moisture

by Caroline Hasler 10 September 202410 September 2024

Scientists are using seismic techniques to measure soil moisture. Their results show that recent droughts in California depleted water in the shallow subsurface.

A strong flare explodes from a red-orange star.
Posted inNews

Small Stars Produce Mighty UV Flares

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 6 September 20246 September 2024

Stronger-than-expected ultraviolet flares could either provide exoplanets the sparks of life or prevent them from having life at all.

Rocas saliendo del océano en una costa
Posted inNews

Circones de 4,000 millones de años podrían contener nuestras evidencias más antiguas de la existencia de agua dulce

by Nathaniel Scharping 4 September 20244 September 2024

Cristales australianos apuntan a la existencia de agua dulce, así como de continentes que se elevaban sobre el océano Hadeano de la Tierra.

Two drawings by astronomer Johannes Kepler of circles with black dots indicating sunspots
Posted inNews

Kepler’s Drawings Might Reveal When the Sunspots Disappeared

by Matthew R. Francis 3 September 20243 September 2024

Johannes Kepler’s landmark 1607 sunspot observations may have been made at the end of the solar cycle, helping constrain the start of the Maunder Minimum.

People floating in colorful tubes in the distance down gentle river rapids.
Posted inNews

Labor Day Dips Alter Stream Composition

by Grace van Deelen 30 August 20242 June 2025

Holiday weekend tubing introduces toxic chemicals and shifts microbial communities in a popular Colorado river.

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Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

How Internal Waves Transport Energy Thousands of Miles Across the Ocean

26 March 202626 March 2026
Editors' Highlights

Machine Learning Could Enhance Earth System Modeling

10 April 20267 April 2026
Editors' Vox

Synergistic Integration of Flood Inundation Modeling Methods

10 April 202610 April 2026
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