• About
  • Special Reports
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • Postcards From the Field
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive: 2015–2025
  • Policy Tracker
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
  • About
  • Special Reports
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • Postcards From the Field
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive: 2015–2025
  • Policy Tracker
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
Skip to content
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
Eos

Eos

Science News by AGU

Support Eos
Sign Up for Newsletter
  • About
  • Special Reports
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • Postcards From the Field
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive: 2015–2025
  • Policy Tracker
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos

Science Updates

Eliot Glacier on Oregon’s Mount Hood.
Posted inScience Updates

Reconstructing Past Sea Level Change to Understand the Future

by E. Steponaitis, Anastasia G. Yanchilina and H. D. Bervid 4 May 201728 October 2021

PALSEA2 2016 Workshop: Sea-Level Budgets at Decadal to Millennial Time Scales to Bridge the Paleo and Instrumental Records; Mount Hood, Oregon, 19–21 September 2016

The lower stratosphere, an ideal region for detecting long-range geoacoustic signals, viewed from a hot air balloon.
Posted inScience Updates

Geoacoustics Takes to the Sky

by D. C. Bowman, E. F. Young and J. A. Cutts 3 May 201725 July 2022

Airborne Geoacoustics Workshop; Albuquerque, New Mexico, 3 January 2017

A rendering of the sunset from space.
Posted inScience Updates

Integrating Research of the Sun-Earth System

by V. K. Jordanova, J. E. Borovsky and V. T. Jordanov 2 May 20174 May 2022

International Symposium on Recent Observations and Simulations of the Sun-Earth System III; 11–16 September 2016, Varna, Bulgaria

Marine scientists deploy a video plankton recorder in the high-latitude North Atlantic in April 2012.
Posted inScience Updates

Optical Sensors Can Shed Light on Particle Dynamics in the Ocean

by S. L. C. Giering 2 May 201727 September 2022

First TOMCAT Workshop; Southampton, UK, 12–14 September 2016

The Klyuchevskoy volcano in eastern Russia during an eruption that began in April 2016 and lasted about 6 months.
Posted inScience Updates

Understanding Kamchatka’s Extraordinary Volcano Cluster

by N. M. Shapiro, C. Sens-Schönfelder, B. G. Lühr, M. Weber, I. Abkadyrov, E. I. Gordeev, I. Koulakov, A. Jakovlev, Y. A. Kugaenko and V. A. Saltykov 1 May 20178 November 2021

An international seismological collaboration in Kamchatka, Russia, investigates the driving forces of one of the world’s largest, most active volcano clusters.

Instruments aboard the container ship Oleander have collected data on plankton since the 1970s.
Posted inScience Updates

Packing Science into a Shipping Vessel

by T. Rossby, R. Curry and J. Palter 28 April 201718 October 2022

Oleander Workshop II: 25 Years of Operations; Narragansett, Rhode Island, 26–27 October 2016

Coronal mass ejection.
Posted inScience Updates

Predictive Capability for Extreme Space Weather Events

by A. S. Sharma, E. E. Kalnay and M. Bonadonna 26 April 201722 April 2022

Workshop on Modeling and Prediction of Extreme Space Weather Events; College Park, Maryland, 22–24 August 2016

Testing the bike-mag system across the shoulder of the Dead Sea fault valley in northeastern Israel.
Posted inScience Updates

A Bike Built for Magnetic Mapping

by U. Schattner 25 April 201712 January 2022

Mounting a magnetic sensor on a bicycle offers an efficient, low-cost method of collecting ground magnetic field data over rough terrain where conventional vehicles dare not venture.

california-drought-agricultural-lake-tahoe-summit
Posted inScience Updates

Management Strategies for Sustainable Western Water

by S. Tyler, S. Chandra and Gordon Grant 25 April 20179 May 2022

U.S. National Science Foundation Workshop: Quenching a Thirsty West; Lake Tahoe, Nevada/California, 29–30 August 2016

Twitchell Island, in Sacramento County, Calif., is a wetland flux site in the FLUXNET network.
Posted inScience Updates

A New Data Set to Keep a Sharper Eye on Land-Air Exchanges

by G. Z. Pastorello, D. Papale, H. Chu, C. Trotta, D. A. Agarwal, E. Canfora, Dennis Baldocchi and M. S. Torn 17 April 201710 March 2023

FLUXNET2015, the latest update of the longest global record of ecosystem carbon, water, and energy fluxes, features improved data quality, new data products, and more open data sharing policies.

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 40 41 42 43 44 … 70 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

Want to Predict Wildfire Severity? Look to the State of Vegetation

4 May 20264 May 2026
Editors' Highlights

Drone Imagery Reveals Marked Variability in Antarctic Snow Roughness

4 May 20264 May 2026
Editors' Vox

Hydrothermal Heat Flow as a Window into Subsurface Arc Magmas

28 April 20261 May 2026
Eos logo at left; AGU logo at right

About Eos
ENGAGE
Awards
Contact

Advertise
Submit
Career Center
Sitemap

© 2026 American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved Powered by Newspack