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Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster (OSP) Awards / 2015 / Lukas Pfitzenmaier
In the mid latitudes, this process is one of the most efficient process for precipitation formation. The observation of microphysical cloud properties from the ground is one possible approach to study the liquid-ice interaction.
Home / Publications / Open access journals
Below are the EGU's open access peer-reviewed journals relevant to the Geochemistry, Mineralogy, Petrology & Volcanology Division. For a complete list of EGU journals, click here . The EGU journals are indexed in the Web of Science, Scopus, Google Scholar, etc. We refrain from displaying the journal metrics here since citation metrics used in isolation do not describe importance, impact, or quality of a journal.
Home / Media Library / Foulden Maar, an extinct volcanic crater near Dunedin, New Zealand.
Surface excavation (on right) and drilling in 2009 (left) unearthed tens of thousands of fossils, including fish, spiders and sucking bugs as well as dozens of plant species. Credit: Credit: Daphne Lee/University of Otago Related EGU articles Fossil leaves point to global greening in the coming decades (20 August 2020) Download Original image (3.0 MB, 3008.0x2000.0 px) Preview image (163.4 KB, 1280x851 px, JPEG format) Go back
https://www.egu.eu/egs/award6w.htm
It is reserved for excellent young scientists with outstanding achievements in a field related with Natural Hazards, with important interdisciplinary activity in two or more fields related with this topic and whose research has been focused on the mitigation of Natural Risks. With the name of Plinius , the medal is intended to acknowledge all the labour of our ancestors to improve the knowledge and mitigation of Natural Hazards.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation (OSPP) Awards / 2022 / Hadeel Al-Zawaidah
.; Waldschlager, K.) Hadeel Al-Zawaidah is a PhD candidate at the Hydrology and Quantitative Water Management group (HWM) at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, where she is working with Bart Vermeulen and Kryss Waldschläger. Her research project focuses on understanding the vertical distribution and transport of riverine microplastics in the presence of turbulence.
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Awards / 2021 / Christine L. Batchelor
Christine Batchelor is a well-established, internationally known and accomplished Early Career Scientist working in the cryospheric sciences. Since her graduation in 2014 from the University of Cambridge, she has contributed a number of studies to palaeo-ice sheet reconstruction by applying sedimentological approaches.
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Awards / 2020 / Anna Joy Drury
Anna Joy Drury completed her PhD on Late Miocene climate variability at Imperial College London in 2014 and has since been affiliated as a postdoctoral researcher with MARUM, University of Bremen (Germany) and, currently, the University College London. In her research, Drury combines classic isotope work on benthic foraminifera with excellence in stratigraphic splicing and stacking.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Awards / 2019 / Christina Lück
In the awarded poster, she presented an approach to use time-variable gravity fields derived from the Swarm mission in a global fingerprint inversion. The aim of the fingerprint inversion is to split sea level changes into its individual mass-related and steric components.
Home / Outreach / Peer Support programme
I am grateful for this programme and hope it be fruitful for students in this coming year. Rheane da Silva (National Institute of Oceanography, Goa, India), participant Mentoring an EGU novice student was the highlight of my 2017 General Assembly week. To see our elaborate and overwhelmingly large meeting through the eyes of a rookie makes you actively aware of many aspects that you have always taken for granted.
Home / Media Library / Virtual water network of the Roman world
The team also used reconstructed maps of the Roman landscape and population to estimate where agricultural production and food demand were greatest, and they simulated the trade in grain based on an interactive reconstruction of the Roman transport network (central panel).