European Geosciences Union
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Home / Media Library / Simulation of glacier retreat in the Filchner-Ronne ice shelf over three centuries (video)
Simulation of glacier retreat in the Filchner-Ronne ice shelf over three centuries (video) (Credit: Cornford et al., The Cryosphere, 2015) Related EGU articles Most comprehensive projections for West Antarctica’s future revealed (18 August 2015) Download Original video (8.8 MB, 22 s, QuickTime/MPEG-4/Motion JPEG 2000 format format) Preview image (16.9 KB, 480x360 px, JPEG format) Go back
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Young Scientist Awards / 2012 / Veerle Vanacker
Veerle Vanacker GM Geomorphology The 2012 Division Outstanding Young Scientist Award is awarded to Veerle Vanacker for her novel approach to distinguish between natural benchmark and accelerated erosion rates in mountain environments under pressure of land use change. Veerle Vanacker’s research focuses on the impact of natural and anthropogenic disturbances on erosion and sediment transfer in mountain regions.
Home / Forms / Emergency Support Application
If the application needs to be supported by a personal statement, please upload that here: This upload should be in the form of a pdf statement written in English. If your statement is not written in English it will result in a lengthy delay to the processing of your application. I agree to my personal data being stored and used by the EGU office during the application process * Information uploaded to this form will be stored securely for a period of 24 months.
Home / Awards & medals / Vilhelm Bjerknes Medal / 2022 / Hugh Coe
He investigated the release of iodine from the marine biosphere and its role in new particle formation. Altogether, Hugh Coe’s body of work on understanding the chemistry and global distribution of aerosols provide the underpinning data used to develop and test our global atmospheric models, and are foundational in our assessments of air pollution and climate change.
Home / Awards & medals / Robert Wilhelm Bunsen Medal / 2020 / Holly J. Stein
Holly J. Stein The 2020 Robert Wilhelm Bunsen Medal is awarded to Holly J. Stein in recognition of her pioneering development of the rhenium-osmium geochronometer and remarkable array of applications of Re-Os geochemistry. Holly Stein’s research includes the development of groundbreaking new geochemical tools and their application to a wide array of problems, and she is currently one of the most influential scientists in the field of geochronology and geochemistry.
Home / Awards & medals / Julius Bartels Medal / 2010 / Karl-Heinz Glassmeier
Karl-Heinz Glassmeier The 2010 Julius Bartels Medal is awarded to Karl-Heinz Glassmeier . He is one of the few scientists worldwide who have worked in all of the sub-fields of geomagnetism, from ground to space, and thus can be called a true ‘Geomagnetiker’ in the sense of Bartels.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Awards / 2016 / Kristin Burmeister
I am interested in the ventilation of the OMZs by lateral alternating zonal jets and how oxygen variability and trends in the OZMs are related to the large-scale ocean circulations and climate modes. The poster is a revision of an extreme cold event in the eastern equatorial Atlantic in 2009.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster (OSP) Awards / 2012 / Bel Helen Burgess
Bel Helen Burgess AS Atmospheric Sciences The 2012 Outstanding Student Poster (OSP) Award is awarded to Bel Helen Burgess for the poster/PICO entitled: The troposphere-to-stratosphere transition in kinetic energy spectra and nonlinear spectral fluxes as seen in ECMWF analyses (Burgess, B. H.; Erler, A. R.; Shepherd, T. G.) Click here to download the poster/PICO file. Bel Helen Burgess is a PhD candidate supervised by Ted Shepherd in the Department of Physics at the University of Toronto in Canada.
Home / Media Library / Difference between sea ice cover in two datasets
To measure sea ice cover, researchers splice together observations from different instruments flown on a number of different satellites. They then use an algorithm – the most prevalent being the Bootstrap algorithm – and further processing to estimate sea ice cover from these data. A new The Cryosphere study compares two datasets for sea ice measurements: one generated using a version of Bootstrap updated in 2007, and another that results from an older version of the algorithm.
Home / Jobs / PhD Position in hydrology
The position includes: Full tuition covered PhD scholarship provided Great research environment Excellent quality of life and student community Candidate profile Background in hydrology, hydrogeology, environmental engineering, geosciences, or a related field Strong interest in groundwater modeling and contaminant transport Experience or a willingness to work with numerical modeling, data analysis, or programming is an advantage Interested candidates are encouraged to contact Dr.