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Earth science

A soccer goalie dives for the ball
Posted inNews

Turf’s Dirty Little Secret

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 14 April 20212 March 2023

Greenhouse gas emissions from sports fields may be scoring points for climate change.

Many ecosystems across Latin America are not represented by environmental observatory networks
Posted inResearch Spotlights

The Gaps in Environmental Networks Across Latin America

Kate Wheeling, freelance science writer by Kate Wheeling 29 March 20216 March 2023

Despite its notable influence on global carbon and water cycles, Latin America accounts for a relatively small share of FLUXNET sites, which limits the representativeness of the network in the region.

Fishermen work from a small boat on a river in southern India with large boulders in the background
Posted inFeatures

Cratons, Why Are You Still Here?

by J. Paul 25 March 202128 January 2022

How have these continental relics from Earth’s early history survived the plate tectonic mixing machine?

Aerial view Erta Ale volcano in Ethiopia
Posted inScience Updates

Breaking Up Is Hard to Do, Especially for Continents

by Lindsay Lowe Worthington, B. D. Shuck, A. Bécel, Z. C. Eilon and C. Lynner 24 March 202125 October 2022

A decade-long research collaboration has revealed that the split between Africa and North America roughly 200 million years ago was more drawn out than previously thought.

Scientists in flight suits stand atop the summit of a volcano with steam rising nearby and a helicopter in the distance
Posted inOpinions

A Successful Model for Interdisciplinary Research

by A. Férot 24 March 202119 November 2021

Over the past decade, the GeoPRISMS program has greatly expanded understanding of shoreline-spanning Earth systems processes and fostered a vibrant and increasingly diverse community of researchers.

Aerial view of part of the Greenland Ice Sheet
Posted inOpinions

Building a Better Model to View Earth’s Interacting Processes

by G. Danabasoglu and J.-F. Lamarque 15 March 202122 March 2022

Researchers collaborated to produce and evaluate a new version of the Community Earth System Model, and they are documenting their work in the AGU CESM2 virtual special issue.

A soil profile from the Wind River Range
Posted inEditors' Vox

Exploring the Engine and Drivers of Soil Formation

by A. G. Hunt, M. Egli and B. A. Faybishenko 26 February 20211 October 2021

A new book presents a multidisciplinary perspective on soil, exploring it as a nexus for water flow, near surface (bio)geochemistry, erosion and deposition, and biologically coupled nutrient cycling.

Photo taken from the International Space Station of Shikoku Island and other parts of Japan
Posted inResearch Spotlights

An Innovative Approach for Investigating Subduction Slip Budgets

by David Shultz 19 February 202118 January 2022

A new 3D model offers a state-of-the-art look at the full spectrum of slip behaviors in the Nankai subduction zone off Japan.

Steep, snow-covered mountains extend to the horizon.
Posted inGeoFIZZ

Cubist Geomorphology: Your Kinship with Picasso, Explained

by D. Dennis 10 February 20215 October 2021

Asked to imagine a modeled landscape, you probably wouldn’t first think of a Cubist painting. But Cubists and geoscientists may have more in common than meets the eye.

Close-up image of garnet lherzolite
Posted inNews

Modeling the Creation of Cratons, Earth’s Secret Keepers

by Jackie Rocheleau 12 January 202120 June 2024

Geoscientists have long been trying to answer the complicated questions of how and why Earth’s continents formed. New research suggests a solution that surprised even the investigators themselves.

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Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

Heat and Pollution Events Are Deadly, Especially in the Global South

14 May 202514 May 2025
Editors' Highlights

Resilient Solutions Involve Input and Data from the Community

14 May 202514 May 2025
Editors' Vox

Decoding Crop Evapotranspiration

6 May 20256 May 2025
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