• About
  • Sections
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
  • About
  • Sections
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive
  • 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
  • Sections
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos

Education & Careers

A headwater stream flows down the side of a rocky and grassy mountainside under a blue sky.
Posted inOpinions

Protecting the Mountain Water Towers of Spain’s Sierra Nevada

by Bopaiah A. Biddanda, Manuel Villar-Argaiz and Juan Manuel Medina-Sánchez 16 September 202224 August 2023

Students and community members monitor the health of mountain water reserves, which capture and release water, evening out wet and dry periods downstream.

Image of many individuals seated at a conference. The photo was taken from the back of the room and shows the backs of the conference goers; it has a red, posterized treatment applied to it.
Posted inOpinions

The Alarming Rise of Predatory Conferences

by Matthieu Chartier 15 September 202210 April 2023

For-profit conferences that masquerade as legitimate academic events but lack trusted selection and peer review processes are becoming more common. Here’s why that matters.

2022 Honors AGU
Posted inAGU News

2022 AGU Section Awardees and Named Lecturers

by Susan Lozier and LaToya Myles 6 September 20227 September 2022

Congratulations to AGU’s 2022 section award recipients and named lecturers!

Map of the European Union and the United Kingdom, with a line drawn through the English Channel
Posted inNews

U.K.-Based Geoscientists Trapped in European Funding Impasse

by James Dacey 1 September 202221 March 2023

Political disputes threaten the United Kingdom’s status in Horizon Europe, the world’s largest transnational funding program.

Posted inEditors' Vox

Notebooks Now! Elevating Computational Notebooks

by Christopher Erdmann, Shelley Stall, Brooks Hanson, Laura Lyon, Brian Sedora, Matt Giampoala and Mia Ricci 18 August 202222 August 2022

AGU is launching a community-driven effort, funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, to support computational notebooks as primary research objects in scholarly publications.

Four world maps showing the simulation of surface ozone by an offline-trained and online-trained machine learning (ML) solver.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Accurate and Fast Emulation With Online Machine-Learning

by Jiwen Fan 16 August 202220 December 2022

Online training produces more accurate and stable machine-learned models than classic offline learning from big data sets.

Two young people riding aboard a boat pick through mud with their hands in search of meteorites.
Posted inNews

Community Scientists Recover Micrometeorites from Lake Michigan

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 15 August 202224 March 2023

A team of scientists, educators, and teenagers discovered the objects, some of which may have been delivered by a fireball that streaked across the sky in 2017.

Posted inFeatures

The Career Issue: Change Is the Only Constant

by Editors 25 July 202226 August 2022

There’s no one way to be a geoscientist. Learn how more than a dozen professionals use Earth and space sciences as a wheelhouse for innovative and interesting careers.

Sian Proctor stands in her astronaut gear shortly after Crew Dragon’s splashdown
Posted inFeatures

Sian Proctor: Community College Professor Goes to Space

by Alka Tripathy-Lang 25 July 2022

An Arizona educator finds she has the SpaceX factor to become an astronaut.

A headshot of Fernando Temprano-Coleto
Posted inFeatures

Fernando Temprano-Coleto: Going with the Flow

by Saima May Sidik 25 July 202227 July 2022

A career in fluid mechanics is both intellectually stimulating and well suited to solving environmental problems.

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 12 13 14 15 16 … 58 Older posts
A view of a Washington, D.C., skyline from the Potomac River at night. The Lincoln Memorial (at left) and the Washington Monument (at right) are lit against a purple sky. Over the water of the Potomac appear the text “#AGU24 coverage from Eos.”

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

Deforestation Is Reducing Rainfall in the Amazon

19 May 202519 May 2025
Editors' Highlights

Bringing Storms into Focus

19 May 202515 May 2025
Editors' Vox

Decoding Crop Evapotranspiration

6 May 20256 May 2025
Eos logo at left; AGU logo at right

About Eos
ENGAGE
Awards
Contact

Advertise
Submit
Career Center
Sitemap

© 2025 American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved Powered by Newspack