• Daily Geology Photos – June 30

    Updated: 2010-06-30 17:20:15
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 79 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Daily Geology Photos – June 29

    Updated: 2010-06-29 17:20:20
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 100 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Geology Links for June 28th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-06-29 07:00:05
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology on June 28th, 2010: BBC News – Goce satellite views Earth’s gravity in high definition Windows to the Universe Amazon.com: earth from above Arts & Photography Books News Coverage Of Gulf Oil Spill And Native Americans Indians: Complete List – Indigenous Peoples Issues and Resources Sabinet – African Journal Archive USGS – Topographic Maps Welcome to [...]

  • Interior Continues Leadership Role in Land Remote Sensing Under National Space Policy Announced by the President

    Updated: 2010-06-29 04:03:59
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – The National Space Policy announced by the White House today recognizes and endorses the Department of the Interior’s expertise and accomplishments in land imaging and remote sensing to advance global climate change research and provide data for science and natural resource management.

  • Daily Geology Photos – June 28

    Updated: 2010-06-28 17:20:11
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 100 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Using sedimentation rates to infer long-term global climate change

    Updated: 2010-06-28 17:00:47
    Over geologic time scales, the Earth naturally captures carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through weathering of silicate rocks and sequesters it via the production of carbonate rocks. Ultimately, subduction can return these rocks to the Earth’s interior and carbon dioxide is once again emitted into the atmosphere by volcanism. Thus, understanding the history of erosion [...]

  • Geoblogosphere week in review (June 21-27, 2010)

    Updated: 2010-06-28 12:00:55
    Some posts from the geoscience blogosphere last week highlighting some interesting writing: Michael Welland from Through the Sandglass writes about how the amazing amoeba-like microbe Difflugia, which fashions its shell out sand, inspires sculpture artists. Chris Rowan from Highly Allocthonous explains the magnitude 5.0 earthquake in the middle of the North American plate (near Ottawa, [...]

  • Geology Links for June 27th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-06-28 07:01:04
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology on June 27th, 2010: Interactives . The Rock Cycle . Introduction Africa ‘witnessing birth of a new ocean’ Flash Presentation What the Earth Knows: an article by Robert B. Laughlin | The American Scholar Saltation (geology) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Dynamic Earth: A Geologic Primer Seismic Waves Inside the Earth, Earth’s Interior Information, Facts, News, [...]

  • Daily Geology Photos – June 27

    Updated: 2010-06-27 17:20:13
    A summary of photos posted on flickr today, tagged with “geology.” Displayed below are 100 geology-related photos were added to flickr today. [...]

  • Sea-Floor Sunday #65: Makran accretionary wedge

    Updated: 2010-06-27 16:00:22
    This week’s Sea-Floor Sunday image is from a recent paper in Sedimentology by Bourget et al. that investigates the deep-marine sedimentary system associated with the Makran subduction zone and accretionary wedge in the northwest Indian Ocean (offshore of Iran and Pakistan). The Arabian plate is subducting northward underneath continental blocks now part of the Eurasian [...]

  • Geology Links for June 26th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-06-27 08:00:04
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology on June 26th, 2010: BBC News – Africa ‘witnessing birth of a new ocean’ Virtual Field Trips for the Classroom or Home at Internet 4 Classrooms http://library.thinkquest.org/J002289/name.html Infographic: Tallest Mountain to Deepest Ocean Trench In pictures: What lies beneath? | The Lie of the Land by Ian Vince | Science | guardian.co.uk YouTube – Oil [...]

  • Friday Field Foto #115: Mountains in the French Alps

    Updated: 2010-06-25 15:00:54
    This week’s Friday Field Foto doesn’t really show any geology — it’s just a nice shot of some beautiful mountains in the French Alps. I need to get out to some mountains soon. Happy Friday! Filed under: Friday Field Foto, photographs I've taken

  • Geology Links for June 24th, 2010

    Updated: 2010-06-25 00:00:06
    Links from del.icio.us, tagged with geology for June 24th, 2010: Geologic Time Page Did You Feel It? Global Volcanism Program | Volcanoes of the World | Types and Processes Gallery | Craters Utah3D – Full Screen 3D Panoramas of Scenic Utah Global Volcanism Program | Volcanic Activity Reports | SI / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report | Global Volcanism Program | [...]

  • June’s Birthstone – Pearl

    Updated: 2010-06-24 18:18:16
    Pearls are a beautiful organic gemstone which is formed in a variety of colors and shapes inside of mollusk shells such as oysters and mussels. This unique gemstone is made of primarily the mineral aragonite. Aragonite is the mineral that lines the inside of the mollusk shell. An organic ...

  • Why I Blog

    Updated: 2010-06-24 15:00:07
    Like Callan and Jessica before me I participated in the “Why I Blog” series at the American Geophysical Union’s (AGU) blog The Plainspoken Scientist: Communicating Science. If you want to know why I blog check out my post. - Filed under: metablogging, personal

  • Rapid canyon formation and uniformitarianism

    Updated: 2010-06-23 15:53:39
    In 2002, flood waters from Canyon Lake dam reservoir in central Texas were diverted into an emergency spillway at nearly 200 times the normal flow rate. The resulting flood event, which lasted for six weeks, removed trees and sediment and excavated a 7 m deep and >1 km long canyon into the limestone bedrock. A [...]

  • Geoblogosphere week in review (June 14-20, 2010)

    Updated: 2010-06-21 12:00:55
    Here are several posts from the geoscience blogosphere last week highlighting some interesting writing: Suvrat Kher from Rapid Uplift shares his thoughts about the effects of ocean acidification on corals. David Bressan from History of Geology provides a follow-up post on his series of the geology and tectonic history of the Alps with some more [...]

  • Friday Field Foto #114: Basalt tree mold

    Updated: 2010-06-18 14:00:45
    This week’s Friday Field Foto is from the Big Island of Hawai’i and shows a tree mold — lava flowed around the tree before the tree went up in flames. Happy Friday! Filed under: Friday Field Foto, Hawai'i, igneous rocks, photographs I've taken

  • GeoSights—Cascade Falls, Kane County, Utah

    Updated: 2010-06-15 23:28:46
    Nestled in the northwestern corner of Kane County is a geologically unique feature that receives relatively few visitors. Although most people in Utah have seen caves and waterfalls, it is peculiar for a waterfall to emerge from a cave system. Cascade Falls does just that, as an underground river emerges from a deep cave system [...]

  • Maps of ecosystems and geology of the United States

    Updated: 2010-06-15 15:06:20
    I was quickly scanning through my favorite blogs and such last night and saw this map posted at Wired Science. For a half a second I thought I was looking at a new geologic map, but it is actually a map produced by the USGS’s Gap Analysis Program (GAP) showing ecosystems. Check out GAP’s website [...]

  • GRANTS HELP LIGHT UP SMALLER TOWNS

    Updated: 2010-06-14 22:58:49
    thespectrum.com If there is such a thing as good pressure, then that’s what Hurricane Power Director Dave Imlay is currently experiencing. In May, the Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems gave the city a $121,950 cut of a $1.2 million federal stimulus grant to upgrade Utah streetlights with energy-saving, LED lamps and fixtures. That means lighting the city would [...]

  • Geoblogosphere week in review (June 7-13, 2010)

    Updated: 2010-06-14 11:00:42
    Here are several posts from the geoscience blogosphere last week highlighting some interesting writing*: Michael Welland, author of the book Sand: The Neverending Story and the blog Through the Sandglass, continues his great writing about plans to construct sand berms in the Gulf coast to help mitigate the ongoing oil well blowout disaster. Michael takes [...]

  • In The News: Japanese Spacecraft Deploys First Ever Solar Sail

    Updated: 2010-06-09 05:00:00
    On the Planetary Society web site: Japanese Spacecraft Deploys First Ever Solar Sail

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