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Home / News / Press releases / EGU Science Journalism Fellowships (up to €5k) – call for applications
Applications must be written in English, and include: (a) A proposal [2 pages]: a working title, motivation, outline of approach, provisional plan of work, suggested publication outlets and an analysis of feasibility (including budget). (b) A summary of experience [1 page]: an account of professional affiliations and previous experience, expertise and acclaim.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation (OSPP) Awards / 2024 / Laura Lünenschloss
Her contribution to the EGU2024 focuses on a further detailed experimental investigation of the mechanisms behind enhanced H 2 O vesicle formation in the hybrid zone of bimodal melts. In this process, she synthesized a glass of the hybrid melt composition on which extensive solubility experiments have been conducted in an internally heated argon pressure vessel.
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Young Scientist Awards / 2013 / Raúl Zornoza Belmonte
Zornoza Belmonte is a frequent invited speaker at international conferences who has supported the EGU as oral and poster author and session co-convener at the 2011 and 2012 General Assemblies. In his still short but rich career, one of the main highlights is the number of stays abroad in prestigious soil science departments of universities and research centres, including Davis, California, US in 2004 and 2005, Hohenheim, Germany in 2006, and Florence, Italy in 2008-2009.
Home / Awards & medals / Arne Richter Awards for Outstanding Early Career Scientists / 2017 / Federico Bianchi
The first selected location was the Jungfraujoch station in the hearth of the Alps (ca. 3500 m asl). The outcome of this study was astounding: even in the free troposphere in the middle of the Alps new particle formation can take place with almost solely organic compounds. These results have been acknowledged by being placed on the Science cover of the 27th of May 2016.
Home / News / EGU news / Job alert! EGU Editorial Manager
Terms of employment This position, to start in autumn 2022, will be subject to a 6-month probation period before confirmation as a permanent member of staff. It is a full-time appointment (40 hours per week). The successful candidate will be entitled to 30 vacation days per calendar year in addition to public holidays in Bavaria including 24 and 31 December.
Home / Awards & medals / Plinius Medal / 2023 / Alberto Viglione
Viglione has dedicated most of his research to understanding and assessing the probabilities of hydrological extremes, advancing substantially the methods to quantify the interplay of climatic, hydrologic, and human processes in river basins.
Home / Awards & medals / Milutin Milanković Medal / 1994 / André L. Berger
André L. Berger The 1994 Milutin Milanković Medal is awarded to André L. Berger in recognition of his authoritative contributions to the astronomical theory of climate variations. Andre Berger, who studied at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and in Louvain, is presently Head of the Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics Georges Lemaitre in Belgium.
Home / Awards & medals / Augustus Love Medal / 2015 / Gregory A. Houseman
In addition, Houseman has explained both coronae on Venus, and intra-orogenic basins on Earth, as resulting from lithospheric instabilities, developed methods to model seismic energy propagation, and has constrained the viscosity of lower crust in an elegant manner, using models of faulting in a visco-elastic medium.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Awards / 2018 / William Durkin
In southeast Alaska, where ongoing deglaciation results in elastic uplift rates of up to ~10 mm/yr, the use of local elastic structures can result in modeled elastic uplift rates up to 50% different than those modeled with the global average elastic structure (i.e., PREM), and up to 100% different if first-order estimates of anelastic interactions with pores and fractures in the crust are considered.
Home / Education / Planet Press / Articles / Scientists calculate deadline for climate action
In a new study published in the EGU journal Earth System Dynamics , a team of scientists from the Netherlands and the UK found that we are running out of time to limit the increase in global temperature to 2° C at the end of the century. They said that we need to act strongly to stop climate change before 2035.