European Geosciences Union
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Home / Media Library / Crevassed terminus of Jakobshavn Isbræ
The glacier terminus (right) flows toward the fjord at speeds of 10 (winter) to 17 (summer) kilometers per year, before breaking off at the edge to form large icebergs that choke the fjord (left). The fast motion stretches the ice, creating deep crevasses visible across the glacier terminus.
Home / Awards & medals / Young Scientist Outstanding Poster Paper (YSOPP) Awards / 2010 / James E. Daniell
Daniell NH Natural Hazards The 2010 Young Scientist Outstanding Poster Paper (YSOPP) Award is awarded to James E. Daniell for the poster/PICO entitled: Open source Procedure for Assessment of Loss (Daniell, J. E.) Click here to download the poster/PICO file. James Edward Daniell is undertaking his PhD as a General Sir John Monash Scholar at the Geophysical Institute of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, Germany and also undertakes research at the Center for Disaster Management and Risk Reduction Technology (CEDIM).
Home / Awards & medals / Outstanding Student Poster and PICO (OSPP) Awards / 2018 / Estelle Bonny
Click here to download the poster/PICO file. Estelle Bonny just graduated with her PhD from the Geology and Geophysics department at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. She worked under the supervision of Robert Wright on remote sensing of volcanoes. She focuses on using thermal infrared satellite images to study lava flows and lava lakes on the Earth’s surface. Her poster focuses on the, now gone, Halemaʻumaʻu lava lake at the summit of Kīlauea volcano on the Big Island of Hawaiʻi.
Home / News / Webinars and online events / EGU Campfire Geodesy - Share Your Research
(CET) on Zoom. We will have time for networking after the presentations. Titles of the talks are: Stacy Larochelle @Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) Columbia University, USA: Geodetic insights into the mechanics of supraglacial lakes Parisa Shafiei @University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg: Earth from Space: Can Cube Satellites Observe Earth’s Gravity Field?
Home / Education / Planet Press / Reviewing an EGU Planet Press release
If you are an educational reviewer for a Planet Press, your job is to ensure that young children can understand the content of the text. If you find that some of the words or phrases may be too complicated for kids to get their heads around, let us know. You are also welcome to make suggestions about how we could improve the educational value of our Planet Presses. For more information about the content of Planet Presses, please check the writing page .
Home / Education / Educational resources / Ocean Senses: Activities Book
We hope people of all ages can be inspired: parents can try some of the ideas out with their children at home, or youth leaders with local youth groups. For example, some of the lessons can be used by older pupils as guides for younger pupils at school or science fairs.
https://www.egu.eu/egs/medalists/hartmann2002.htm
EGS Runcorn-Florensky Medallists - 2002 William K. Hartmann and Gerhard Neukum for their outstanding contributions to the determination of the age of planetary surfaces from the frequency distribution of impact craters
Home / Awards & medals / Runcorn-Florensky Medal / 2002 / Gerhard Neukum
The 2002 Runcorn-Florensky Medal is awarded to Gerhard Neukum for their outstanding contributions to the determination of the age of planetary surfaces from the frequency distribution of impact craters.
Home / Awards & medals / Virtual Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation (vOSPP) Awards / 2021 / Gloria Tognon
For the EGU general assembly 2021, Gloria presented a poster displaying age measurement results derived from different areas selected on the basaltic infilling of the lunar far side Tsiolkovskiy crater. The crater size-frequency distributions measurements allowed to discriminate distinct age ranges well ascribable to the different Clementine-based spectral units identified for the crater floor and thus enabled to reconstruct the succession of events of lava emplacement.
Home / Awards & medals / Virtual Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation (vOSPP) Awards / 2021 / Sara Vulpius
.; Noack, L.;) Click here to download the poster/PICO file. Sara Vulpius is a PhD candidate at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. The goal of her research project is to simulate volatile cycles on early Earth (mainly H 2 O and CO 2 ). Together with Prof. Lena Noack, she focuses on the intrusive release of volatiles from the Earth’s interior on the one hand and on the recycling of volatiles back into the mantle on the other hand.