Using cutting-edge observations, reanalyses, and climate models, a new study projects the outbreak of temperature extremes over new global areas by 2100.
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Print Archive
To view issues of Eos from 1997 through 2014, please visit Wiley Online Library. Older issues are available through an institutional subscription to AGU’s backfile or for AGU members by logging in to AGU. To receive Eos in your mailbox, become a member today. 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015 2020 VOL. 101, NO. 11NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2020 VOL. 101, NO. 10OCTOBER 2020 VOL. 101, NO. 9SEPTEMBER 2020 VOL. […]
Staff Profile
Caryl-Sue Micalizio Biography Caryl-Sue Micalizio is the editor in chief at Eos. She happily joined Eos as its managing editor in 2019, after more than a decade creating and managing content at National Geographic. She has been a journalist since graduating from the University of California, Irvine and has degrees in arts and humanities.
Staff Profile
Anaise Aristide Biography Anaise Aristide joined Eos as a Production and Analytics Specialist in 2020. Anaise has a background in multimedia and is passionate about finding creative ways to educate and disperse knowledge into communities. Since graduating from Temple University with a B.A. in Media Studies and Production, she has primarily worked with grassroots organizations to create content […]
Science Adviser Profile
Kerstin Stahl Biography Kerstin Stahl has a DFG Heisenberg professorship of Environmental Hydrological Systems at the University of Freiburg in Germany. Before she returned to the university where she had graduated in 2001, she worked as a postdoc and research scientist at Oregon State University, the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and the University of […]
Science Adviser Profile
Hansi Singh Biography Hansi Singh studies the myriad of interactions between atmosphere, ocean, and ice over both poles, using a combination of Earth system models and satellite observations. She is interested in the differences between the climate change response over the Arctic and Antarctic, particularly with respect to the sea ice. She also studies the interconnection […]
Science Adviser Profile
Eric M. Riggs Biography Dr. Eric M. Riggs is the Dean of College of Natural Resources & Sciences at Humboldt State University. He was formerly a professor of geoscience education in the Department of Geology and Geophysics at Texas A&M University. The Riggs Group studies many related aspects of teaching, learning, and cognition in the geosciences. […]
Processes in Earth’s Mantle and Surface Connections
A new AGU book presents a multidisciplinary perspective on the dynamic processes occurring in Earth’s mantle.
The Changing Climate’s Snowball Effect
Shrinking snowpack, thawing permafrost, and shifting precipitation patterns have widespread consequences. Can new technologies—and public policies—help communities adapt?
Impacts by Moving Gravel Cause River Channels to Widen or Narrow
A new analytical model describes how the amount and grain size of sediment transported by rivers influences bedrock channel width, which can be used to predict where rivers will widen or narrow.