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AIPG
AIPG is currently accepting abstracts for oral presentations and poster presentations for the 57th American Institute of Professional Geologists National Conference that will be held in Sacramento, California, from Oct. 3-6.
The national conference provides opportunities to present and learn from experts in various geology and geoscience fields, with networking opportunities throughout the conference. Earn CEUs, too!
AIPG
If you are attending any of the GSA Section Meetings and would like to volunteer at the AIPG booth please email Dorothy Combs, AIPG Membership Services at cld@aipg.org.
- 8-10 March: GSA South-Central Section Meeting, Fort Worth, Texas
- 20-22 March: GSA Southeastern & Northeastern Sections Meeting, Reston, Virginia
- 3-5 May: GSA Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, Orem, Utah
- 12-14 May: GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting, Pasadena, California
- 18-19 May: GSA North-Central Section Meeting, Duluth, Minnesota
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Date |
Event |
More Information |
March 8-10
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GSA South-Central Section Meeting |
Fort Worth, Texas |
March 20-22
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GSA Southeastern and Northeastern Sections Annual Meeting — Geoscience Careers for New Geoscience Graduates |
Reston, Virginia |
April 6-10
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AAG Annual Meeting |
Denver |
April 7-8
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AIPG Georgia Section 9th Innovative Environmental Assessment and Remediation Technology |
Registration is open |
April 20-24
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The 16th Sinkhole Conference |
San Juan, Puerto Rico |
April 30
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The 2020 Western South Dakota Hydrology Conferencee |
Rapid City, South Dakota |
May 3-5
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GSA Rocky Mountain Section Meeting |
Orem, Utah |
May 9
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AIPG IL/IN Spring Field Trip |
Contact Harvey Pokorny |
May 12-14
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GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting |
Pasadena, California |
May 12-24
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Geological Society of Nevada 2020 Symposium — REGISTRATION OPEN! |
Contact Eric Struhsacker |
May 18-19
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GSA North-Central Section Meeting |
Duluth, Minnesota |
June 16-17
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10th Annual AIPG Michigan Section Technical Workshop Environmental Risk Management Workshop |
Roscommon, Michigan |
Sept. 15-20
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Association of Environmental & Engineering Geologists 2020 Annual Meeting |
Portland, Oregon |
Oct. 3-6
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2020 AIPG National Annual Conference |
Sacramento, California |
| FROM THE AIPG ONLINE STORE |
AIPG
A 6.5 oz. fabric, 100 percent cotton, garment washed, generous cut, double needle stitched, tuck-in tail, button-down collar, horn tone buttons, patch pocket and adjustable cuffs with an embroidered AIPG logo is now available. Available in sizes small-3XL.
READ MORE
AIPG
These fun sunglasses have UV protection and are available in black/black, black/red and black/blue. AIPG Sections, these will make a great give-a-way for your next event. Be sure to contact HQ to receive a volume discount! READ MORE
AIPG
A warm, stylish accessory constructed from 100 percent acrylic. This beanie comes in a variety of solid colors, or with a contrasting trim, embroidered with the AIPG logo.
Available colors: gray, gray/black, black, black/natural, light pink/white, natural/navy, navy, navy/natural.
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VuLink is a global telemetry device that
Connects with one button press
Works anywhere with cellular and satellite
Delivers long-lasting battery life
VuLink securely installs in a two-inch well, for easy, efficient and reliable data transmission. And the price will challenge your assumptions. Watch the video.
In-situ.com
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LiveScience
Pointing toward South America like an icy finger, the Antarctic Peninsula is one of the fastest-warming regions on Earth. The peninsula's two major glaciers — the Thwaites Glacier and the Pine Island Glacier — are retreating toward the mainland faster than new ice can form, chipping away at the continent's coasts a little more each year.
All that melting ice left behind a surprise that could change maps of the region permanently: an uncharted island, long buried in ice but finally visible above sea level for the first time.
READ MORE
University of Tsukuba via ScienceDaily
Researchers found two processes immediately after the end-Cretaceous asteroid impact that likely supplied chalcophile elements to the ocean, i.e., impact heating and acid rain. The former produced iron oxides/hydroxides and released chalcophile elements from the struck rock. Iron oxides/hydroxides could have carried chalcophile elements to the seafloor. Acid rain could have supplied some chalcophile elements, especially copper and silver to the ocean, where they accumulated in organic matter.
READ MORE
Geosciences
Whether magma accumulating in the crust develops into a persistent, eruptible magma body or an incrementally emplaced pluton depends on the energy balance between heat delivered to the bottom in the form of magma and heat lost out the top. The rate of heat loss to the surface depends critically on whether heat transfer is by conduction or convection. Convection is far more efficient at carrying heat than conduction, but requires both abundant water and sufficient permeability.
READ MORE
University of British Columbia via ScienceDaily
New data gleaned from the magnetic sensor aboard NASA's InSight spacecraft is offering an unprecedented close-up of magnetic fields on Mars.
In a study published Feb. 24 in Nature Geoscience, scientists reveal that the magnetic field at the InSight landing site is ten times stronger than anticipated, and fluctuates over time-scales of seconds to days.
READ MORE
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