Here’s what we hope to read this stay-at-home summer. What are you reading?
Notices and announcements
This Week: Social Distancing at Sea, Climate Migration on Land
What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?
This Week: We Thank Our Teachers
It’s Teacher Appreciation Week, so we’re thanking the educators who inspired and challenged us. #ThankATeacher!
This Week: Antique Climate Science and Brand-New Broken Comets
What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?
This Week: Green Reads for Earth Week
What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?
Building a Culture of Safety and Trust in Team Science
An Arctic research team of 150 members that implemented a culture of safety, inclusion, and trust as the foundation for cross-disciplinary science shares lessons from its experiences.
This Week: Fake News, Floods, and a Dazzling Flyby
What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?
Walter C. Pitman III (1932–2019)
Pitman pioneered research on seafloor spreading, proposed a scientific backstory to the Great Flood and Noah’s Ark, and reveled in spirited discussions of all kinds.
This Week: Guilty Pleasures to Get You Through Quarantine
Taking a brief break from Earth and space science for…primal screams and pet pics?
Kumamoto and Thom Receive 2019 Mineral and Rock Physics Graduate Research Award
Kathryn M. Kumamoto and Christopher A. Thom received the 2019 Mineral and Rock Physics Graduate Research Award at AGU’s Fall Meeting 2019, held 9–13 December in San Francisco, Calif. The award is “presented annually to one or more promising young scientists and recognizes outstanding contributions to the field of mineral and rock physics achieved during the honoree’s Ph.D. research.”
