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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Geology published by this site and its partners.

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    Jun 16, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. River-rafting trips go with the flow in the West

    Despite the drought that plagued Southern California last winter, river rafters can still get their paddles wet: Parts of Northern California and other Western states got the rain and snow that missed SoCal.
    Despite the drought that plagued Southern California last winter, river rafters can still get their paddles wet: Parts of Northern California and other Western states got the rain and snow that missed SoCal. California's Kings, Kern, Kaweah, Merced...

    Tags: Air Transportation Industry, Sports, Tourism and Leisure, Travel, Trips and Vacations

  2. Jun 2, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  3. READER SUBMITTED: Geology Walk In Manchester

    Manchester
    On Saturday, May 25, the Manchester Land Conservation Trust sponsored a free geology walk in the Case Mountain Recreation Area. Geologist Gary Robbins described the rock formations and the forces that brought them about to a group of 22 hikers who...

    Tags: Land Resources

  4. May 28, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  5. |Story
  6. Mar 21, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Bright Minds: Debra Buczkowski, planetary science

    When Debra Buczkowski was 7, in 1976, NASA’s Viking space probes were landing on Mars and sending images of the red planet back to Earth as part of their $1 billion mission.
    When Debra Buczkowski was 7, in 1976, NASA’s Viking space probes were landing on Mars and sending images of the red planet back to Earth as part of their $1 billion mission. “I realized that no matter where I went on this planet, I couldn&...

    Tags: Mathematics, Boston, Education, Colleges and Universities, Science

  8. Mar 27, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Oklahoma earthquakes linked to injection wells

    HOUSTON -- Oklahoma&rsquo;s <a href=&quot;http://articles.latimes.com/2011/nov/06/nation/la-na-oklahoma-earthquake-20111107" target="_blank">largest-recorded earthquake</a> was&nbsp;triggered&nbsp;by injection wells used by the oil and gas industry, according to a report released this week.
    HOUSTON -- Oklahoma’s largest-recorded earthquake was triggered by injection wells used by the oil and gas industry, according to a report released this week. The Tuesday report in the geoscience journal Geology is the latest scientific evidence...

    Tags: Interior Policy, Austin (Chicago, Illinois), Jared Lee Loughner, Earthquakes, Personal Weapon Control

  10. Mar 1, 2013 |Story| Aberdeen News
  11. Report fails to settle concerns over oil spill risk to Ogallala Aquifer

    The question of how an oil spill from the proposed Keystone XL pipeline might affect the Ogallala aquifer was raised again this month, in a report the U.S. State Department will use to help it decide whether to approve or reject the controversial project....

    Tags: Dave Heineman, Environmental Issues, TransCanada Corporation, Technology, Kinder Morgan Incorporated

  12. Feb 20, 2013 |Column| Hartford Courant
  13. Floating In A Cosmic Shooting Gallery

    The Hartford Courant
    Sometimes, it's comforting to know that none of us are really in charge. There but for the grace of the great roulette wheel in the sky go I. I refer to the planetary stray bullets called asteroids, one of which streaked into the Russian atmosphere...

    Tags: Explosions, Emergency Incidents, Tour Operations Industry, World War II (1939-1945), University of Connecticut

  14. Jan 25, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  15. New Western Md. map could mark turn in geology research

    The last statewide map of Maryland geology, published in 1968, is out of print. Online versions of it are marked with a disclaimer that it's too imprecise for anything but &quot;historical and illustrative purposes." But a push to drill for Marcellus shale could help bring it into the 21st century.
    The last statewide map of Maryland geology, published in 1968, is out of print. Online versions of it are marked with a disclaimer that it's too imprecise for anything but "historical and illustrative purposes." But a push to drill for Marcellus shale...

    Tags: Mining, Ocean City, Metal and Mineral, Martin O'Malley, Towson University

  16. Jan 18, 2013 |Story| Aberdeen News
  17. Minnesotans pay a price for crop fertilizer at faucet

    HASTINGS, Minn. - Debbie Carlson can laugh at the irony: She's the wife of a well digger who can't find good water for his own family. Like one out of three wells in Dakota County, hers is so contaminated with nitrates she won't let anyone drink from it...

    Tags: Pregnancy and Childbirth, Glaciers, Chemical Industry, Medical Procedures and Tests, Environmental Issues

  18. Jan 11, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  19. Neil Shubin on 'The Universe Within'

    As sure as an automobile could not have been built by even the most enterprising Neanderthal, the appearance of humans on Earth could not have occurred without the myriad of developments that began with the birth of the universe, and continued with the evolution of our planet.
    As sure as an automobile could not have been built by even the most enterprising Neanderthal, the appearance of humans on Earth could not have occurred without the myriad of developments that began with the birth of the universe, and continued with the...

    Tags: Global Change, Chemical Industry, Environmental Issues, Paleontology, Conservation

  20. Dec 2, 2012 |Story| RedEye
  21. Hanging with Bill McKibben on the 'Do the Math' Tour

    I recently had the privilege of hanging out backstage with Bill McKibben on 350.org&rsquo;s &ldquo;Do the Math&rdquo; tour. Any regular reader of this column has heard me talk about McKibben before. He&rsquo;s the author and environmentalist who began his career with the prescient &ldquo;The End of Nature&rdquo; back in 1989.
    I recently had the privilege of hanging out backstage with Bill McKibben on 350.org’s “Do the Math” tour. Any regular reader of this column has heard me talk about McKibben before. He’s the author and environmentalist who began his...

    Tags: Barack Obama, Global Change, Environmental Issues, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Ronald Reagan

  22. Nov 24, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  23. Maybe give sanity a try

    The Baltimore Sun
    It has been a fallow interval at the blog because of some hectic days at the paragraph factory, domestic exigencies, and the like, but I am back today to advocate, in my small way, sanity. Immediately after the late election, the outbreaks of...

    Tags: Barack Obama, Christianity, Genetics, Elections, Nuclear Power

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