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AIPG

We have available AIPG Graduation Stoles and they look amazing! They can be purchased online in the AIPG Store for $24 each (includes shipping).
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Past AIPG Section Newsletters available online.
AIPG
The AIPG National Office is closely monitoring the COVID-19 outbreak. At this time, AIPG staff have canceled travel until May 1. In addition, the AIPG National Office Staff have gone to a 85% telework schedule. The AIPG Staff WILL BE AVAILABLE to take your calls, answer your questions, and provide the excellent services that our members have come to expect. We are taking every action to insure that member data will not be compromised as we work from home. If you have any questions, comments or concerns, please feel free to reach out to us at aipg@aipg.org.
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How well do you know your level data? Join this free webinar for a closer look at how water level measurements are made with a pressure transducer and how to interpret the data for best results. Happening April 17. Three times available.
Register today!
And check out our
Spring Webinar Series.
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Geological Society of America

Register for the upcoming Geological Society of America (GSA) GeoCareers webinar to learn about professional geologist licensing requirements, how becoming licensed can influence your career opportunities and success, and what qualifications and skills are important for early career geologists looking for work in the fields of environmental and engineering geology. Register here.
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Seismological Society of America via ScienceDaily
At the regional level and worldwide, the occurrence of large shallow earthquakes appears to follow a mathematical pattern called the Devil's Staircase, where clusters of earthquake events are separated by long but irregular intervals of seismic quiet. The finding published in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America differs from the pattern predicted by classical earthquake modeling that suggests earthquakes would occur periodically or quasi-periodically based on cycles of build-up and release of tectonic stress.
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Science Magazine
California's Central Valley — one of the richest agricultural regions in the world — is sinking. During a recent intense drought, from 2012 to 2016, parts of the valley sank as much as 60 centimeters per year. "It isn't like an earthquake; it doesn't happen, boom," says Claudia Faunt, a hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. But it is evidence of a slow-motion disaster, the result of the region's insatiable thirst for groundwater.
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Live Science
A swath of Yellowstone National Park larger than Chicago has been rising and falling in erratic jitters over the past 20 years, and it's all because of some wayward magma, a new study finds.
This magma has been so active, it's responsible for lifting up the area around Norris Geyser Basin at Yellowstone a total of 5 inches (almost 13 centimeters) since 2000. The finding sheds light on the enigmatic magmatic system that lies beneath Yellowstone.
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Nature Scientific Reports
We provide arguments in favor of impact origin of a 200 km suspected impact crater Kotuykanskaya near Popigai, Siberia, Russia. We use the gravity aspects (gravity disturbances, the Marussi tensor of the second derivatives of the disturbing geopotential, the gravity invariants and their specific ratio, the strike angles and the virtual deformations), all derived from the combined static gravity field model EIGEN 6C4, with the ground resolution of about 10 km and a precision of about 10 milliGals.
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Geosciences
Hydrogen isotopes in the shergottite Martian meteorites are among the most varied in Mars laboratory samples. By collating results of previous studies on major hydroxyl, deuterium, and H2O bearing phases, we provide a compendium of recent measurements in order to elucidate crustal-rock versus mantle-rock processes on Mars.
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