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Editors’ Highlights

Satellite photo of Earth with a large shadow covering Antarctica.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Solar Eclipses May Initiate Disturbances in Geospace

by Yuichi Otsuka 6 February 20245 February 2024

The statistical evidence from 21 years of data suggests that a solar eclipse may trigger a geomagnetic substorm, which is a disturbance in the Earth’s magnetosphere and ionosphere.

Satellite image of a large dust storm over North Africa.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Using Machine Learning to Reconstruct Cloud-Obscured Dust Plumes

by Donald Wuebbles 2 February 20241 February 2024

Satellite-observed dust plumes from North Africa are frequently obscured by clouds, but a new study uses machine learning to reconstruct dust patterns, demonstrating a new way to validate dust forecasts.

Photo of a dust storm hitting a home in an arid region.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

A Dust-Up Over Dust Measurements

by Gabriel Filippelli 29 January 202425 January 2024

Dust has significant impacts on the environment, climate, air quality, and human health, yet dust events are underestimated and therefore do not receive the level of attention necessary.

Photo of an iceberg in water.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Deep Learning Tackles Deep Uncertainty 

by Nicholas Golledge 26 January 202424 January 2024

A new method based on artificial intelligence could help accelerate projections of polar ice melt and future sea level rise.

Photo of a dryland with shrubs.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

New Tracers of Wind Erosion Provide Insight into Dryland Vegetation

by Gregory Okin 25 January 202423 January 2024

Rare earth element tracers provide insight into how fire and wind transport influence the vegetation state of the world’s drylands.

Two graphs from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Measuring Link Between the Chemistry and Physics of the Atmosphere

by Bjorn Stevens 24 January 202424 January 2024

A new study sheds light on the coupling between the chemical composition and the physical properties of the atmosphere.

Graph from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Compound Extreme Events Threaten Marine Ecosystems

by Eileen Hofmann 23 January 202419 January 2024

Short-term extreme marine heat wave events superimposed on stressors from longer-term climate change produce compound extreme events that impact the Gulf of Alaska ecosystem.

Satellite photo of the Himalayas.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

How Good a Recycler is the Himalaya?

by Mikaël Attal 22 January 202422 January 2024

Researchers use sediment recycling to their advantage to calculate how fast the hills at the front of the Himalaya are eroding based on the concentration of rare elements in river sands.

Diagram from the study.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Law and Order for Friction and Faults: One Law to Rule Them All

by Peter Zeitler 19 January 202418 January 2024

Faults are made of complex materials with complex behaviors, and having a single model that can predict these behaviors is an advance in understanding deformation and the earthquake cycle.

Photo of the Waimakariri River with farmland and mountains in the background.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Modeling Braided Rivers in Presence of Exotic Weeds and Dams

by Enrica Viparelli 17 January 202418 January 2024

Numerical modeling can help with identifying the combined effects of weed growth, flood frequency, and magnitude on gravel bed rivers.

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Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

Lakeside Sandstones Hold Key to Ancient Continent’s Movement

18 August 202518 August 2025
Editors' Highlights

Where the Pigs and Buffalo Roam, the Wetlands They do Bemoan

19 August 202519 August 2025
Editors' Vox

Early-Career Book Publishing: Growing Roots as Scholars

6 August 202530 July 2025
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