This message was sent to ##Email##
|
|
|
|

AIPG
Search for jobs by keywords, job title or location. Post your résumé and let employers find you at the AIPG Career Center.
READ MORE
AIPG
We recognize that all of you face uncertainty as we work to minimize the impact of COVID-19. At AIPG, we are working diligently to provide the excellent support and service you’ve come to value and expect of us. At this time, the National Office Staff, the California Organizing Committee, and the National Executive Committee are working hard to host our Annual Meeting in Sacramento, from Oct. 3-6. The health and safety of our attendees and our staff are our highest priority. As a result, we are constantly monitoring the evolving situation surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, and the timing and extent of stay at home orders in individual states. At this time, we are moving forward with plans to hold a face-to-face annual meeting. However, we understand that this situation is dynamic and that plans may change. AIPG will notify our members immediately should our plans to host an in-person meeting change.
We likely will adjust the abstract submission, registration, and cancellation deadlines in order to provide more flexibility for our meeting planner and our attendees as we move forward. Please check the AIPG website for updates, and feel free to reach out to the National Office Staff directly with any questions or concerns that you may have.
Best Regards,
Aaron W. Johnson, Ph.D.
Executive Director
AIPG
awj@aipg.org
303-412-6205 ext 110
Promoted by
|
|
|
 |
Past AIPG Section Newsletters available online.
 |
|
May 8 – Are You Giving Your pH Data the Attention it Deserves? Take a deep dive into understanding how pH sensors work, why the data is important, and how to get the most out of yours.
Register today!
May 15 – How to Make Low-Flow Groundwater Purging Easy, Affordable and Reliable. We’ll review the basics of low-flow purging and the benefits of the VuSitu mobile app.
Register today!
|
|

by University of Johannesburg via Phys.org
At an idyllic island in the Mediterranean Sea, ocean covers up the site of a vast volcanic explosion from 3,200 years ago. A few hundred kilometers north-west, three other islands still have their volcanic histories from a few million years ago mostly intact. No explosions there. So why the differences between the Santorini caldera and the Aegina, Methana and Poros lava domes? Researchers used volcanic "fingerprints" and plate tectonics research to find out.
READ MORE
University of California – Santa Barbara via ScienceDaily
The geologic record is exactly that: a record. The strata of rock tell scientists about past environments, much like pages in an encyclopedia. Except this reference book has more pages missing than it has remaining. So geologists are tasked not only with understanding what is there, but also with figuring out what's not and where it went.
READ MORE
Frontiers in Earth Science
Since the initial proposal of the past existence of a southward-directed mid-ocean ridge–subduction interaction in the Andes during Late Cretaceous–Paleogene times, several studies have been devoted to uncover the tectonomagmatic evidence of this process. The collision of a spreading ridge against a subduction margin provokes important tectonomagmatic changes, including, between them, variations in arc-related magmatic activity and in the plate-margin stress regime. However, the cryptic nature of the geological record often hampers assessing the influence and along-strike evolution of this process.
READ MORE
Royal Ontario Museum via Phys.org
New research published May 11 in the journal Nature Astronomy reveals a type of destructive event most often associated with disaster movies and dinosaur extinction may have also contributed to the formation of the moon's surface.
A group of international scientists has discovered that the formation of ancient rocks on the Moon may be directly linked to large-scale meteorite impacts.
READ MORE
Geosciences
In this paper, we present the upgraded version of RockGIS, a stochastic program for the numerical simulation of rockfalls and their fragmentation, based on a fractal model. The code has been improved to account for a range of fragmentation scenarios, depending on the impact conditions.
READ MORE
|
|
|
|
 7701 Las Colinas Ridge, Ste. 800, Irving, TX 75063
|