European Geosciences Union
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https://www.egu.eu/newsletter/loupe/71/
View this email in your browser The LOUPE Issue 71, November 2020 The year-round resource for EGU members Geoscience for the benefit of humanity and the planet Credit: Lon Abbott and Terri Cook Milankovitch Cycles Centennial Astrochronology: a recent application This year marks the 100th anniversary of Milutin Milankovitch’s first paper about how the amount of solar radiation Earth receives, and hence its climate, varies cyclically.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster (OSP) Awards / 2015 / Rachael Moore
Rachael Moore PS Planetary and Solar System Sciences The 2015 Outstanding Student Poster (OSP) Award is awarded to Rachael Moore for the poster/PICO entitled: Morphotype disparity in the Precambrian (Moore, R.; Reitner, J.; Braiser, M.; Donoghue, P.; Schirrmeister, B.) Click here to download the poster/PICO file. Rachael Moore is now an early stage researcher in the Marie Curie initial training network ABYSS and a PhD student at the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris under the supervision of Prof.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation (OSPP) Awards / 2023 / Anika Donner
Anika Donner CL Climate: Past, Present & Future The 2023 Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation (OSPP) Award is awarded to Anika Donner for the poster/PICO entitled: Warmer and wetter past interglacials in northeast Greenland recorded in speleothems (Donner, A.; Moseley, G. E.; Vessies, J.; Kofler, W.; Marquer, L.; Friedrich, L.; Spötl, C.; Edwards, R. L.) Click here to download the poster/PICO file. Anika Donner is a PhD candidate in the Quaternary Research Group at the University of Innsbruck.
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Awards / 2019 / Andrew Bennett
Click here to download the poster/PICO file. Andrew Bennett is a PhD student at the University of Washington in Seattle, USA. His research focuses on using information theory to compare and evaluate different hydrologic modeling approaches. The poster presented at EGU 2019 showed results comparing an ensemble of 289 different modeling approaches to simulate turbulent heat fluxes.
Home / About EGU / Historical highlights / Founding members
The European Geosciences Union (EGU) was founded on 7 September 2002 in the Hotel Platzl in Munich by the following Members of Council of both the European Geophysical Society (EGS) and the European Union of Geosciences (EUG): Founding members Jan Backman Jonathan Bamber Ray Bates Günter Blöschl Lars Clemmensen Max Coleman Peter Fabian Gerald Ganssen Jean-Pierre Gattuso David Gee Fausto Guzzetti Albrecht Hofmann Jürgen Kurths Yves Langevin John Ludden Arne Richter Michael Rycroft W.
Home / News / EGU news / EGU Outreach Committee seeking new members
The Committee seeks 3 new members to help further its programme. Prospective candidates should be: interested in a wide range of geoscience subjects that are linked to the activities of the Union (as exemplified by its different divisions) strongly interested in outreach activities willing and able to work in a committee, preferably with experience Applications should include a letter explaining how the applicant could contribute to EGU outreach activities (1 page) and a CV (2 pages).
Home / Policy / Information for policymakers
If you would like scientific information on a specific policy area, please don’t hesitate to contact the Science for Policy Officer, Zsanett Gréta Papp ( policy@egu.eu ) . The EGU provides a summary of policy-relevant papers that have been published in one of the EGU's 19 open access journals. These publications focus on recent scientific studies that have implications or outcomes that may be of interest to policymakers. The EGU’s science-policy pairing scheme.
Home / Media Library / Borneo rainforest (Danum Valley)
The Borneo rainforest as seen from the one of the measurement locations in the Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysia. The copyright holder has authorised the use of this image under the conditions specified by the "Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike licence":http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
Home / Education / Geolocations / Krapina Neanderthal Museum
Yes Do you need permissions to access the location? No Website http://www.mkn.mhz.hr/en/ Description In Krapina Neanderthal Museum you will discover how Neanderthal people lived and find out about their life in various parts of Europe. The museum was built near the Hušnjakovo locality and it has the largest and most abundant collection of Neanderthals collected at a single locality.