European Geosciences Union
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Home / Convener Guidelines
Session programme (September/October) The PC builds the session programme out of the proposed sessions. In case of evident overlap, the TS PC will ask conveners to merge sessions or modify the focus. Please note that in the TS division, sessions and conveners are not continued automatically from one year to the next. Conveners will be notified of acceptance of their session for the TS programme.
https://www.egu.eu/egs/medalists/sabadini98.htm
EGS Badge Award 1998 Roberto Sabadini in recognition of his generous services as EGS Editor of the journal Geophysical Journal International Professor Roberto Sabadini graduated from the University of Bologna in 1977 and he is now Full Professor of Physics of the Earth at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Milano.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Awards / 2019 / Florian Pohl
He graduated in 2014 at the University of Bonn with a focus on structural geology and tectonics. In 2015 he started a PhD at the Utrecht University and investigated the movement and deposition of sediment by turbidity currents. For this he conducted physical experiments in the Eurotank flume laboratories and outcrop studies in South Africa and Svalbard.
Home / Outreach / Newsletter / GeoQ #2
– 20 International Innovation interview: EGU Executive Secretary – 21 Press Release Geoengineering could disrupt rainfall patterns – 23 Journal Watch A tsunami wave recorded near a glacier front – 24 Drivers of flood risk change in residential areas – 24 Photo-lability of deep ocean dissolved black carbon – 25 Global characteristics of the lunar tidal modulation of the equatorial electrojet derived from CHAMP observations – 25 On the role of ozone in long-term trends in the upper atmosphere-ionosphere system – 26 The regulation of the air: a hypothesis – 26 Evidence of a possible turning point in solar UV-B over Canada, Europe and Japan – 26 Estimating the climate significance of halogen-driven ozone loss in the tropical marine troposphere – 27 Revisiting Narrow Bipolar Event intracloud lightning using the FORTE satellite – 27 External News ESA declares end of mission for Envisat – 28 Study of Patagonian glacier’s rise and fall adds to understanding of global climate change – 29 Taming uncertainty in climate prediction – 30 ‘Warming hole’ delayed climate change over eastern United States – 31 Cassini sees objects blazing trails in Saturn ring – 32 Education Report on the 2012 editon of GIFT – 33 Books Continuum Mechanics in the Earth Sciences – 34 Orogenesis: The Making of Mountains – 34 Tsunamis in the World Ocean: Past, Present and Future, Volume II – 35 Atmosphere, Clouds, and Climate – 35 Book review: The Ecology of Snow and Ice Environments – 36 On the Web Featured website: Climate Communication – 37 Social media: Who’s following the EGU?
Home / Awards & medals / Lewis Fry Richardson Medal / 2004 / Michael Ghil
Modern methods of time series analysis and their applications in earth sciences are another focus of his work: he combined mathematical tools like the singular-spectrum analysis, the maximum entropy method, the extended Kalman filtering and the multi-taper method in a toolkit for short and noisy, chaotic signals which typically occur in climate data sets and used this for the study of paleoclimatic time series, interseasonal oscillations in the global atmosphere, tropical air-sea interaction in GCMs and others.
Home / Awards & medals / Vening Meinesz Medal / 2018 / Markus Rothacher
Rothacher’s comprehensive approach can also be tracked during his work on space geodetic techniques and to Earth sciences in general at the Technical University of Munich, GFZ Potsdam and ETH Zurich. In the context of gravity field modelling, Rothacher developed the technique of GPS-based kinematic orbit determination of low-Earth orbiters (LEO), the purely geometric estimation of high precision orbit ephemerides.
https://www.egu.eu/egutoday/2023/tuesday/
This session draws on a wide range of disciplines to examine our physical understanding, monitoring, modelling, predicting, and assessment of environmental, social, and economic impacts of rapidly emerging dry/hot-extremes NH9.16 : PICO : 08:30–10:15 ( CEST ) PICO spot 3b Enabling Reproducibility in Earth System Science research through open and FAIR data, workflows and models Geological awareness of the importance of the reproducibility of research results has increased considerably in recent years.
Home / Jobs / Tenure-Track Professorship of Mineralogy of Weathering
Position Tenure-Track Professorship of Mineralogy of Weathering Employer University of Tübingen Homepage: https://uni-tuebingen.de/en/research/core-research/cluster-of-excellence-terra/terra/ Location Tübingen, Germany Sector Academic Relevant divisions Geochemistry, Mineralogy, Petrology & Volcanology (GMPV) Geomorphology (GM) Soil System Sciences (SSS) Type Full time Level Experienced Salary Open Required education PhD Application deadline 1 June 2026 Posted 27 March 2026 Job description The position will be created in the framework of the Cluster of Excellence 3121 “TERRA: Terrestrial Geo-Biosphere Interactions in a Changing World”, a large research initiative at the University of Tübingen in collaboration with the University of Hohenheim and Senckenberg - Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth System Research ( https://www.terra-cluster.org).
Home / News / EGU news / Job alert! Executive Assistant
We are particularly interested in applications from people who are from under-represented communities in the sciences; please get in touch with us if anything can be done to support such an application. Salary, work package and starting date: This position, to start in spring 2026, will be subject to a 6-month probation period before confirmation as a permanent member of staff.
Home / Publications / Highlight articles
Read more Wine must yields as indicators of May to July climate in Central Europe, 1416–1988 Climate of the Past DOI 10.5194/cp-22-541-2026 9 March 2026 Narrative historical records of wine production in Central Europe date back to 1200.