• VIRTUAL ROCK KIT CONTEST

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Help us create the first virtual rock and mineral kit and WIN a deluxe My Rockin’ Collection kit for you! ENTER through May 22, 2010 at 11:59 pm EST How to Enter: Post a comment on our blog and tell us the name of your favorite rock or mineral and why you ...

  • Happy Earth Day Savings!

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Happy Earth Day everyone!  In celebration of our Earth, save 10% on your entire order through Sunday, April 25th using coupon code:  EARTHDAY. Shop now at www.MiniMeGeology.com and have a great Earth Day!

  • Iceland’s Volcano – The ‘Dirty Thunderstorm’

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    By now, most of us have heard about the volcano that is erupting in Iceland, named Eyjafjallajokull.  I ran across these amazing photos on MSNBC this morning that are just fantastic. Some volcanoes produce lightening during an eruption and it is call a Dirty Thunderstorm.  Please take a minute to view ...

  • Igneous Rocks are made from Volcanoes

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Volcanoes are areas where rock is built up around an opening in the Earth which connects the land surface to the magma below the ground.  When the pressure deep below the volcano increases, the magma is erupted from the ground.  There are three most common types of volcanoes - Shield ...

  • Diamonds!

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    It is Mineral Week here at Mini Me Geology so we are starting out with one of my personal favorites.  DIAMONDS! Did you know that pencil lead and diamonds are made of the same thing?  It is hard to believe but they are both made of carbon!  The carbon forms ...

  • Aquamarine: March Birthstone

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Aquamarine is a pale blue form of the mineral beryl.  Aquamarine crystals can occur in such rocks as granites and pegmatites.  These beautiful gemstones have a glassy luster (shine) and are either translucent or transparent.  These properties make aquamarine a prized stone for all types of jewelry.  Mineral trivia: What ...

  • Sedimentary Rocks

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Sedimentary rocks are formed when sand, small pieces of rock, or mud are deposited as layers of sediment.  These layers of sediment are pressed together over a long period of time and form a sedimentary rock from the pressure and cementation process.  Sedimentary rocks are unique because they can be ...

  • Anniversary Savings this Week!

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Today is my anniversary and we have decided to give you the present!  Beginning today and going through Sunday, February 28th, we are offering 13% off of your entire order.  We have been married for 13 years today so we are celebrating with a 13% off sale! Any item....any volume....you pick!  ...

  • A Few Geology Jokes….

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    I have been collecting geology jokes for years.  I'm not sure where I've even heard them all.  If I hear one, I write it down.  Here are a few of my favorites. If you have some of your own, leave them in the comments or send us an email.  We'd love ...

  • Growing Salt Crystals Experiment

    Updated: 2010-04-30 06:57:48
    Hey Kids!  Try this fun experiment to learn more about growing mineral (salt) crystals. Make sure that you have an adult help you with this experiment and do not touch the boiling water. You will need: Clean Jar String (we prefer cotton) Scissors Tape (optional) Pencil 1-2 Cups ...

  • Daily Geology Photos – April 29

    Updated: 2010-04-29 17:20:07
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 63 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Invasive Saltcedar and Russian Olive Trees Consume Similar Amounts of Water as Native Cottonwoods and Willows, Wildlife Effects Mixed

    Updated: 2010-04-29 05:06:52
    Additional Contact: ? Catherine Puckett, USGS, 352-278-0165, cpuckett@usgs.gov Long considered heavy water users and poor wildlife habitat, non-native saltcedar and Russian olive trees that have spread along streams and water bodies in the West may not be as detrimental to wildlife and water availability as believed. In a U.S.

  • Geology Links for April 28th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-04-29 04:00:05
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology for April 28th, 2010: State Geological Survey issues new seismic maps File:Plates tect2 en.svg – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia New evidence of (transient) liquid water on Mars! | Bad Astronomy | Discover Magazine 2010 Geologic Map of California Welcome to the California Geological Survey Earth Revealed: Index to Video Study Guides Is the Earth’s core solid? [...]

  • NEW BOOKLET PROVIDES DETAILS ON UTAH’S ENERGY RESOURCES

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:43
    Did you know that Utah Has been a net exporter of energy since 1980? That Utah has the second-lowest price for home heating via natural gas production in 2008 reached an all time high of $2.7 billion? These are just a few of the facts detailed in a new publication, “Utah’s Energy Landscape,” from the Utah [...]

  • UTAH PALEONTOLOGISTS FIND MEAT-EATING DINOSAUR

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:41
    KSL.com Paleontologists are excavating intact bones of a meat-eating dinosaur in central Utah. The find, made in late November, was announced Monday by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and the College of Eastern Utah’s Prehistoric Museum. The museum’s field and laboratory manager, John Bird, says the site east of Castle Dale includes more than 20 vertebrae that [...]

  • UTAH HOMEOWNERS CAN EARN THOUSANDS BY SHIFTING TO SOLAR, WIND

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:39
    Salt Lake Tribune Utahns who want to tap the sun and wind for energy might be eligible for cash rebates of up to nearly $5,000. The money — which Utahns now can apply for — would come from the state’s share of the federal stimulus aimed at renewable energy. It would be available to households, small businesses and [...]

  • CASH REBATES FOR SOLAR AND WIND ENERGY SYSTEMS

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:38
    A new cash rebate incentive program for solar and wind energy systems begins today. The Utah State Energy Program (USEP) announced applications are now available for Utah residents, small businesses, and nonprofit organizations interested in generating renewable energy. The rebate amounts cover approximately 25 percent of the cost of a typical residential system. “This program will [...]

  • Geological heroes: Marine geologist Bill Normark

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:35
    The theme for this month’s geoscience blog carnival, The Accretionary Wedge, is geological heroes. Callan Bentley of the Mountain Beltway blog is hosting: I invite all participants (geobloggers and geoblog readers alike) to contribute stories of their heroes. It’s time to pay tribute to the extraordinary individuals who helped make your life, your science, and [...]

  • UTAH SHAKES, RATTLES, AND ROLLS

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:34
    Salt Lake Tribune It wasn’t The Big One, but Thursday’s earthquake did enough shaking to make northern Utah take notice. A 4.9 magnitude earthquake hit five miles northeast of Randolph at 5:59 p.m. Thursday, according to the University of Utah Seismograph Stations. The shaking at the Rich County Sheriff’s Office in Randolph knocked down pictures, but did not [...]

  • Friday Field Foto #109: Yosemite granite

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:34
    This week’s Friday Field Foto is from a weekend trip I took last month to Yosemite National Park. I’ve been trying to broaden my photo collection with more than just sedimentary rocks … so today is a close-up of some beautiful Yosemite granite. Now that I think about it, I’m assuming this is granite — [...]

  • GOVERNOR ANNOUNCES EARTHQUAKE PREPAREDNESS WEEK

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:33
    ksl.com Gov. Gary Herbert has designated April 4-10 as Earthquake Preparedness Week. A website provides tips on what to do in preparation for an earthquake and its aftermath. The Utah Seismic Safety Commission says about 700 earthquakes, including aftershocks, occur every year in Utah. Roughly 80 percent of the state’s population would be affected by a magnitude 7.0 [...]

  • Papers I’m Reading — April 2010

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:32
    It’s been a busy few weeks, I’m not reading as much as I should be; here is this month’s installment in the papers I’m reading series: Palinkas, C.M., et al.,  in press, Observations of event-scale sedimentary dynamics with an instrumented bottom-boundary-layer tripod: Marine Geology, doi: 10.1016/j.margeo.2010.03.012. [link]  Paull, C.K., et al., in press, The tail [...]

  • Sea-Floor Sunday #63: Bathymetric maps in vicinity of Eyjafjallajokull volcano

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:31
    I’m using this week’s Sea-Floor Sunday to show a few simple maps of the region around the erupting Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland. I don’t have a photographic memory of the Earth’s surface so I always like to remind myself what a region’s topography/bathymetry looks like. The first image (below) is a regional map centered on [...]

  • APRIL LECTURE SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:30
    thespectrum.com Join Bill Lund, Senior Scientist with the Utah Geological Survey, and learn about the structure of the active earth of Southwestern Utah. Might we experience events similar to those that have recently affected Haiti, Turkey, Chile, and Japan? April 9: The Geology of Kanab Point April 16: Pioche; The Early Days April 23: Earth Day [...]

  • Day #114 Outcrop: Alexandria Bay Nonconformity

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:29
    As promised back on Tuesday, this weekend I’m going to visit a pair of outcrops (well, roadcuts, actually) on opposite sides of the Adirondack Mountains that expose the Great Unconformity where the Cambrian Potsdam Sandstone lies depositionally atop a nonconformity developed on Late Proterozoic gneisses of the Adirondacks. We’ll begin on the west side of the [...]

  • ‘Extreme’ sedimentation event associated with Icelandic volcanic eruption

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:29
    The ongoing eruption of the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland is making big news because of the effect of the ash on flights in northern Europe. My two main sources of information, the Eruptions blog and The Volcanism Blog, both do a great job of not only relaying up-to-date information but providing tons of links to various [...]

  • Friday Field Foto #108: A beautiful day in the Canadian Rockies

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:28
    I realize it’s been pretty quiet on this blog for a few weeks — I was doing some traveling (mostly for work but with some fun thrown in there as well). But now that I’m back and have returned to the “normal” state of busy-ness I should be able to get a few posts out [...]

  • Friday Field Foto #107: Wind ripples on the beach

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:26
    This week’s Friday Field Foto is of some nice wind ripples on a beach in Kaua’i. That’s it … that’s all I got today. Happy Friday! Filed under: Friday Field Foto, Hawai'i, patterns, photographs I've taken, sedimentary structures

  • In The News: Obama NASA plan: Mars shot as next generation's Apollo mission

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:18
    On the Planetary Society web site: Obama NASA plan: Mars shot as next generation's Apollo mission

  • Sediment2010

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:10
    : skip to main skip to sidebar The Lost Geologist Pages Home About Me Research Interests Geoblogoshere Favorite Links and Bookmarks Thursday , April 15, 2010 Sediment2010 Posted by Lost Geologist June 25th till 27th will be the time for the Sediment2010 meeting of the Central European Section of the SEPM SEPM-CES and the newly established Sedimentology Section of the Geologische Vereinigung GV The goal of this meeting is to provide a focus on the current sedimentological research in Germany and neighbouring . countries The meeting will be located in the city of Potsdam , close to Berlin . There will be a number of short courses and field trips around . Berlin Just an hour ago I submitted by own abstract for a poster presentation about some of the results of my Diploma mapping project . So

  • Blogging Hiatus

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:10
    : skip to main skip to sidebar The Lost Geologist Pages Home About Me Research Interests Geoblogoshere Favorite Links and Bookmarks Wednesday , April 28, 2010 Blogging Hiatus Posted by Lost Geologist Most of you probably already noticed the decline in blogging activity here during the last few months . It is mainly caused by a lack of creativity which is in turn being drained by my thesis and worries in the form of technical and organisational problems or about what to do in the time after receiving my Diplom Master . I've been looking for PhD positions in Central Europe related to Economic Geology and or Sedimentology but until now without success . Also on friday will be the first of probably a number I hope of job interviews . To save my energy for my thesis and job PhD hunting I

  • Happy Easter - Frohe Ostern!

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:09
    I want to wish all my readers, geobloggers and all people a wonderful holiday and Happy Easter!Allen Lesern, Bloggern und allen Anderen wuensche ich ein frohes und gesegnetes Osterfest!

  • First Contact with the Electron Microprobe

    Updated: 2010-04-28 22:55:09
    : skip to main skip to sidebar The Lost Geologist Pages Home About Me Research Interests Geoblogoshere Favorite Links and Bookmarks Friday , April 9, 2010 First Contact with the Electron Microprobe Posted by Lost Geologist Today was my long awaited first appointment with the electron microprobe . Already a month ago I had arranged this session to exemplify on three selected samples the distribution and source of arsenic and other important elements . It was a good but exhausting day spent in the lab together with the research assistant of the mineralogy department who is in charge of the EMP . We confirmed my hypothesis as to the source of arsenic with some pretty clear readings dispite working on grain sizes at the lower limit of the possible with our device . The smallest measured grain

  • Daily Geology Photos – April 28

    Updated: 2010-04-28 17:20:07
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 58 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Geology Links for April 27th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-04-28 06:00:05
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology for April 27th, 2010: EarthScope: An Earth Science Program ‘Noah’s Ark’ found in Turkey | The Sun |News Water Pollution and the Textile Industry | AirDye® – Good for Business Global Volcanism Program | Volcanic Activity Reports | SI / USGS Weekly … China, Pollution, and Textiles: A Cotton Problem? | AirDye® – Good [...]

  • Keeping Track of Grizzly Bears in the Northern Rockies

    Updated: 2010-04-28 01:59:06
    USGS uses innovative approaches in bear research Rural areas with human development can lessen grizzly bear survival in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, and innovative bear rub tree surveys can successfully monitor grizzly population dynamics in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem, suggest two new studies released by the U.S. Geological Survey in the Journal of Wildlife Management . ? The studies highlight dynamic tools to assist in conservation and management of grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Continental Divide ecosystems, the two largest strongholds for grizzly populations in the contiguous United States

  • Video Shows Baja Earthquake Created a Devilish "Mini-Tsunami" for Endangered Devils Hole Pupfish

    Updated: 2010-04-28 00:49:00
    Additional contact :? Jon Sj?berg, Nevada Dept. Wildlife, 702-486-5127, x3300, sjoberg@ndow.org For tiny Devils Hole pupfish, startling video shows it must have felt like a “huge tsunami” when violent water-level oscillations from an earthquake 300 miles away disturbed the small ledge they live on in a single Mojave Desert cavern pool for some 15 minutes.

  • Daily Geology Photos – April 27

    Updated: 2010-04-27 17:20:10
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 71 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Geology Links for April 26th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-04-27 02:00:06
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology for April 26th, 2010: An Amazing Journey to The Centre of The World: Investigating The World Below | Scienceray USGS Geologic Names Database USGS Education USGS Education USGS Education Earthquake Facts and Statistics This Dynamic Earth [USGS] Wegener’s Puzzling Evidence Exercise (6th Grade) Geologic Investigations Map I-2800: This Dynamic Planet THIS DYNAMIC PLANET: A TEACHING COMPANION The Interior of the [...]

  • Yellowstone and the State of Grizzlies

    Updated: 2010-04-26 20:16:13
    Recent research by the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team provides new insight into grizzly population dynamics and the hazards that influence bear mortality within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, which is one of the largest strongholds for grizzly populations in the United States. Chuck Schwartz, USGS biologist and lead of the study team, discusses these findings.

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