In the field: Yukon Wolves, Moose, and Diamond Tooth Gerties
The best field projects are those that last several seasons; the ones you kind of own or share with any […]
The best field projects are those that last several seasons; the ones you kind of own or share with any […]
My early geological education was very much New Zealand centered; the gamut of sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic rocks (there are
Have you ever looked at some locale on a map or photograph and thought “that looks like an intriguing place
Final exams over, a moment of tomfoolery, and I found myself disconsolate in a hospital bed, recovering from an operation
A rocky mound, 1500m above, and 119.44 km straight-line distance from the sea, is about as far as one can
Analogies are the stuff of science. In geology, we frequently employ modern analogies of physical, chemical, or biological processes to
This post is about asymmetry – the Arctic and Antarctic polar regions. They are the most frigid places on Earth,
Krakatoa, 1883, and the seas shivered. The eruption, one of the largest in recorded history, delivered tsunamis that swept away
The Saturday Evening Post, March 4, 1944, featured on its cover the iconic Norman Rockwell portrait of The Tattoo Artist.
A “Nitrate timebomb”. Last week’s media metaphor (Nov 10, 2017), was no doubt intended to create visions of dire deeds.