European Geosciences Union
Need help? Read the getting started page for tips on how to use the site search.
Searching ... 4525 items found
Home / Awards & medals / Alfred Wegener Medal & Honorary Membership / 2020 / Ingeborg Levin
Her measurements of the decrease in atmospheric radiocarbon after nuclear weapons tests are used in applications in fields as diverse as forensics and neurobiology. Going forward, her work has the added potential to advance atmospheric monitoring techniques for emission reduction targets such as those included in the 2015 Paris Agreement, demonstrating the broader impact of her work to society.
Home / News / EGU news / Apply to be one of our Artists in Residence for #EGU23!
More information The European Geosciences Union ( EGU ) is Europe’s premier geosciences union, dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in the Earth, planetary, and space sciences for the benefit of humanity, worldwide. It is a non-profit interdisciplinary learned association of scientists founded in 2002 with headquarters in Munich, Germany.
Home / Education / Educational resources / What is the fate of dissolved oxygen in our oceans?
Associated divisions Climate: Past, Present & Future (CL) Ocean Sciences (OS) Language English Age group 16-18 Type of activities Classroom Home Material needed The article and activity sheet are available through the following link: https://futurumcareers.com/what-is-the-fate-of-dissolved-oxygen-in-our-oceans Source https://futurumcareers.com/what-is-the-fate-of-dissolved-oxygen-in-our-oceans Description Dr Babette Hoogakker, based at Heriot-Watt University in the UK, leads the FARGO project, which studies past dissolved oxygen concentrations in the Pacific Ocean.
https://www.egu.eu/newsletter/egu/16/email/
, in Seismology Image of The Week – EGU General Assembly 2016 , in Cryospheric Sciences When Cryospheric Research Transforms Lives , in Cryospheric Sciences Unwind your EGU stress with a geomorphology memory game , in Geomorphology Questions of Resource Sustainability in a World of Consumers , in Energy, Resources and the Environment More posts from the EGU blogs are available at blogs.egu.eu .
https://www.egu.eu/newsletter/egu/34/email/
, in Climate of the Past Planting seeds of deformation in numerical models , in Geodynamics Strengthening Early Career Scientists (ECS) in EGU ESSI , in Earth and Space Science Informatics Cargèse Earthquake Summer School 2017 , in Tectonics and Structural Geology Mapping the bottom of the world – an Interview with Brad Herried, Antarctic Cartographer , in Cryospheric Sciences Buckle up!
Home / Awards & medals / Philippe Duchaufour Medal / 2011 / Stefan Helmut Doerr
His early research involved collaboration with Portuguese and British colleagues, but these collaborative links have rapidly expanded to involve work with colleagues from Australia, the USA, Canada, Spain, Holland and across the whole of Europe. His contribution also includes work as guest editor for special issues on the topic of soil water repellency and in fire effects on soils in some of the best journals in hydrology and soil science, and being currently the Editor in Chief of the International Journal of Wildland Fire, which is a high impact factor journal.
Home / News / EGU news / Illustrator and sculptor will be artists in residence at the EGU General Assembly 2019
He says his participation in the EGU General Assembly “will be a great influence towards recontextualizing my art practice, both in terms of looking at Earth processes in a finer detail, and in terms of the analogies that can be drawn between the geosciences and the human sciences.”
Home / Profile / Roland Schlich
In charge of the geomagnetic programme, he wintered at the Charcot Station at an altitude of 2400 m and 317 km inland , in the vicinity of the South true magnetic pole. He was received Doctor of Science from the Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI) in 1974 with a thesis on the Structure, Age and Evolution of the Indian Ocean.
Home / Awards & medals / Louis Néel Medal / 2022 / David A. Lockner
Beyond this, Lockner was amongst the first to investigate brittle creep and fault friction at true crustal conditions. He has played a pivotal, collaborative role in understanding the physical properties of rocks recovered from active fault drilling projects all over the world, and in understanding the low strength of the San Andreas and other major faults in terms of mineral composition and hydrologic properties.
https://www.egu.eu/newsletter/egu/28/email/
, in WaterUnderground Emerging Contaminants: The Rough Teenagers , in GeoSphere Of Karst! – short episodes about karst , in WaterUnderground EGU division blogs Hot towns, summer in the city!