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biogeosciences

Posted inNews

Fungus, Physics Explain Weird Tresses of Ice 

by C. Reed 29 July 20154 May 2023

Alfred Wegener, of plate tectonics fame, proposed a link nearly 100 years ago between fungi and "hair ice" on dead wood. A new study has identified the fungus and how it may influence ice structure.

Posted inAGU News

Manzoni Receives 2014 Early Career Hydrologic Science Award

by AGU 2 April 20155 May 2023

Stefano Manzoni received the 2014 Early Career Hydrologic Science Award at the 2014 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, held 15–19 December in San Francisco, Calif. The award is for significant early career contributions to hydrologic science.

Posted inAGU News

Benitez-Nelson Receives 2014 Sulzman Award for Excellence in Education and Mentoring

by AGU 27 March 201519 May 2023

Claudia Benitez-Nelson received the 2014 Sulzman Award for Excellence in Education and Mentoring at the 2014 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, held 15–19 December in San Francisco, Calif. The award is given for "significant contributions by a mid-career female scientist as a role model and mentor for the next generation of biogeoscientists."

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Atmospheric Carbonyl Sulfide Hit a Minimum 5,000 Years Ago

by C. Schultz 31 December 201424 February 2023

A new ice core measurements-based record of a climate-active gas shows variability on millennial timescales.

Posted inNews

Estuaries May Face Increased Parasitism as Sea Levels Rise

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 18 December 201410 November 2022

Researchers document how past sea levels changes affected invertebrate health in coastal environments.

Posted inScience Updates

A Deep Cabled Observatory: Biology and Physics in the Abyss

by B. M. Howe and Faith Ishii 25 November 20143 February 2023

The ALOHA Cabled Observatory, located 100 kilometers north of Oahu, is enabling a variety of studies of the biology and physics of the deep ocean.

Posted inNews

Tectonic Events May Have Triggered the Cambrian Explosion

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 18 November 201430 January 2023

A researcher proposes a tectonic mechanism that could have helped drive one of the biggest evolutionary events in history: the Cambrian Explosion.

Posted inScience Updates

Expanding the Role of Reactive Transport Modeling in Biogeochemical Sciences

by L. Li, K. M. Maher and A. Navarre-Sitchler 2 September 201422 December 2021

Reactive Transport Modeling Workshop;
Alexandria, Virginia, 13–15 April 2014

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