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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.
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Awards / 2019 / John Carter
Just a few years after his PhD, he is the worldwide leader of hydrated mineral analyses on Mars. He dominated the past seven years of discoveries in Mars compositional analyses from orbit. He has published papers in Science and Nature Geoscience journals to present first order discoveries on ‘Detection of hydrated silicates in crustal outcrops in the northern plains of Mars’ and on ‘Ancient plutonic processes on Mars inferred from the detection of possible anorthositic terrains’, respectively.
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Awards / 2018 / Giovanni Ludeno
Now, he is also working in the field of inverse electromagnetic scattering for radar data processing, in subsoil investigations from ground-based platforms and from drones. Another of his fields of research regards the use of terahertz waves for material characterisation in several fields ranging from vegetation monitoring to archaeology.
Home / Education / Planet Press / Articles / Tiny plankton could have a big impact on Earth’s climate
Both are the main food source for lots of other living things in the sea, and form the basis of the ocean’s food chain. Without plankton, the stability of the oceans and the animals and plants that live in them would be at risk. Scientists have recently investigated what will happen to plankton in the oceans when there is much more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than there is today.
https://www.egu.eu/newsletter/egu/58/email/
, in Geodynamics YHS interview Serena Ceola: shedding light on interrelations between human impacts and river networks , in Hydrological Sciences The bad, the good and the unpredictable: living with volcanoes (part 1) , in Natural Hazards NP Interviews: the 2019 Lewis Fry Richardson Medal Shaun Lovejoy , in Nonlinear Processes in Geosciences The hard part of life: the secrets of biomineralization , in Stratigraphy, Sedimentology and Palaeontology Geothermal Energy and Structural Geology?
Home / Awards & medals / Division Outstanding Early Career Scientist Awards / 2026 / Eva Boergens
Furthermore in light of emerging water security issues, she quantified the severity and spatial extent of the European droughts in 2018 and 2019 using satellite derived terrestrial water storage changes. The breadth of her geodetic expertise and her drive to come up with real-world applications is also reflected in her early work on using radar altimetry for inland surface water monitoring.
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!
https://www.egu.eu/egs/medalists/romanowicz2003.htm
In developing a higher order asymptotic theory for normal modes, she showed in particular that coupling between multiplets leads to the sensitivity of the seismogram to the odd part of lateral heterogeneity, and that focusing terms in the amplitudes depend on transverse gradients of heterogeneity along the source-station path.
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!