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meetings & workshops

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

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

Mother-of-pearl clouds over Lørenskog, near Oslo, Norway, half an hour after sunset.
Posted inNews

Science Offers New Clues About Paintings by Munch and Leonardo

Bas den Hond, Science Writer by Bas den Hond 27 April 201725 January 2023

An unusual type of cloud might explain the sky in The Scream, and scientific verisimilitude reveals which is the real da Vinci masterpiece, new studies suggest.

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

Protestors gathered at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.
Posted inNews

Iranian Scientist Reflects on Trump’s Attempted Immigration Ban

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 26 April 20177 November 2022

Eos caught up with Solmaz Adeli, an Iranian researcher based in Germany who was almost barred from entering the United States for an important scientific meeting.

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

Titan and Dione with Saturn.
Posted inNews

What to Expect from Cassini's Final Views of Titan

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 20 April 201717 January 2023

Cassini will fly close to Saturn's largest moon one last time. Here's a look back at what the spacecraft has revealed and ahead to scientists' final close glimpses of the moon.

Microbes in the soil are central players in converting carbon into greenhouse gases.
Posted inAGU News

How Do Microbial Ecosystems and Climate Change Interact?

Billy M. Williams, director, Science, AGU by B. M. Williams 18 April 201720 April 2023

The American Society for Microbiology and the American Geophysical Union offer insights from a transdisciplinary collaboration of their scientists regarding this question and areas for further study.

Posted inEditors' Vox

Why It’s Time for a New Mission to Venus

by J. Filiberto 12 April 20177 March 2022

A packed session entitled "Unveiling Venus" at the recent Lunar and Planetary Science Conference shows renewed interest in our sister planet.

How Earth precesses and nutates gives clues to interior processes.
Posted inScience Updates

Earth's Wobbly Path Gives Clues to Its Core

by V. Dehant and R. Gross 11 April 20178 April 2022

Understanding the Earth Core and Nutation; Brussels, Belgium, 19–21 September 2016

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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

As Wildfires Increase in the West, So Does Suppression Spending

10 June 202610 June 2026
Editors' Highlights

Multi-Scale Fault Roughness Encapsulated in a Friction Law

11 June 202611 June 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
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