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AIPG
AIPG is excited to announce the launch of our redesigned website. The new site has a clean and updated look, improved navigation and expanded functionality.
- Renew your membership online
- Easily maintain your profile
- Reset your password or request your username in real time
- Meeting and event registration
- And new features and future improvements on the way!
We encourage you to take a moment to sign in, review your profile and browse the improved website.
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AIPG

Register | Exhibitor Form | Sponsor Form | Conference Schedule | Presentations
For the best deal, register soon; early bird rates end at midnight on Aug. 31. Full registration includes Welcome Reception and Foundation of AIPG Silent Auction on Sunday, Technical Sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday, Poster Session on Monday, Lunch with Keynote Speaker on Monday, Lunch on Tuesday, and Breaks with food and beverages on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Stay at the DoubleTree hotel and experience Vermont charm through the many things to do in and around Burlington.
Book your room online or for phone-in reservations, call (855) 686-8875 and be sure to use the group code "AIPG Annual Conference" to receive the reduced conference rate of $139+ tax per night, which will be honored until Aug. 28.
Date |
Event |
More Information |
Aug. 26-28
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COGA's 31 Annual Energy Summit |
Denver |
Aug. 28-29
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Machine Learning & AI Upstream Onshore Congress 2019 |
Houston |
Sept. 12-13
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Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Groundwater Geochemistry (900 mins.) |
Mars, Pennsylvania |
Sept. 14-17
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AIPG 2019 Annual Conference, in Burlington, Vermont |
Presentation Schedule |
Sept. 15
|
Foudation of AIPG Silent Auction |
Contact Barbara Murphy |
Sept. 16-17
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Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Groundwater Geochemistry (900 mins.) |
Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania |
Sept. 16-17
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6th Annual New Technologies For Lower Cost, More Efficient On Shore Well Site Facilities 2019 |
Houston |
Sept. 17-19
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6th Annual New Technologies For Lower Cost, More Efficient On Shore Well Site Facilities 2019 |
Houston |
Sept. 17-22
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Association of Environmental & Engineering Geologists 62nd Annual Meeting |
Asheville, North Carolina |
Sept. 21
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Student and Your Professionals Career Workshop |
Phoenix |
Oct. 13-19
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Earth Science Week |
Contest information |
Oct. 23
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AIPG Illinois-Indiana Section Fall 2019 Section Meeting and Annual Vendor Technology & Networking Night |
Lisle, Illinois |
Feb. 8, 2020
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AIPG Arizona Section Event — Tucson, Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase |
Tucson, Arizona |
April 20-24, 2020
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The 16th Sinkhole Conference |
San Juan, Puerto Rico |
May 12-24, 2020
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Geological Society of Nevada 2020 Symposium |
Contact Eric Struhsacker |
| FROM THE AIPG ONLINE STORE |
AIPG
The AIPG Store has two new T-shirts available — order online. $17 for AIPG members or $19 for non-members (includes S&H).
AIPG
The men's Sport-Tek® ultimate performance long-sleeve crew T-shirt combines a soft cotton hand with sweat-wicking performance to make training (or lounging) cooler and drier. Fabric/style: 5-ounce, 95/5 poly/spandex jersey; tag-free label, loose athletic fit and raglan sleeves.
The Sport-Tek® ladies' long-sleeve V-neck tee is lightweight, roomy and highly breathable, these moisture-wicking, value-priced tees feature PosiCharge technology to lock in color and prevent logos from fading. It is 3.8-ounce, 100 percent polyester interlock with PosiCharge technology, gently contoured silhouette, removable tag for comfort and relabeling, self-fabric V-neck and set-in sleeves.
AIPG
This business card wallet features the AIPG logo and includes two clear PVC pockets for holding business cards, licenses and credit or debit cards, too. READ MORE
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute
New research from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) published Aug. 19, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science provides evidence of the formation and abundance of abiotic methane on Earth and shows how the gases could have a similar origin on other planets and moons, even those no longer home to liquid water. Researchers had long noticed methane released from deep-sea vents. But while the gas is plentiful in the atmosphere where it's produced by living things, the source of methane at the seafloor was a mystery.
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Standford News
The Earth's subsurface is an extremely active place, where the movements and friction of plates deep underground shape our landscape and govern the intensity of hazards above. While the Earth's movements during earthquakes and volcanic eruptions have been recorded by delicate instruments, analyzed by researchers and constrained by mathematical equations, they don't tell the whole story of the shifting plates beneath our feet.
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Phys.org
Glacier-fed rivers in Northern Canada may be consuming significant amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, according to new research by University of Alberta biologists.
The researchers examined the Lake Hazen watershed in Quttinirpaaq National Park on Ellesmere Island in Nunavut to study the impact of melting glaciers on freshwater systems.
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Gizmodo
On Oct. 3, 2018, the Hayabusa2 spacecraft dropped a lander toward the surface of the asteroid Ryugu from 135 feet up. The lander was able to snap some incredible images of the rocks on Ryugu, both during its 6-minute descent and its 17 hours on the surface before its batteries died. Scientists have released these images, which could have exciting implications. Fascinatingly, the surface looks a whole lot like meteorites found on Earth called carbonaceous chondrites, according to the paper published in Science.
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Frontiers in Earth Science
The formation of new craters or cones in active volcanoes can influence the style and frequency of eruptions and may also significantly affect volcanic hazard. Here, we explore how the lava flow hazard changed on Mount Etna in the past 20 years, while continuous shifts in the location of volcanism in the summit area were experienced.
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Phys.org
Scientists have long known that water was abundant on ancient Mars, but there has been no consensus on whether liquid water was common, or whether it was largely frozen in ice.
Now a new comparison of patterns of mineral deposition on the red planet with similar depositions on Earth lends weight to the idea that early Mars had one or more long periods dominated by rainstorms and flowing water, with the water later freezing. The findings were presented at the Goldschmidt Geochemistry Conference in Barcelona.
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Minerals
Rock mineral recognition is a costly and time-consuming task when using traditional methods, during which physical and chemical properties are tested at micro- and macro-scale in the laboratory. As a solution, a comprehensive recognition model of 12 kinds of rock minerals can be utilized, based upon the deep learning and transfer learning algorithms. In the process, the texture features of images are extracted and a color model for rock mineral identification can also be established by the K-means algorithm.
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Geosciences
Coseismic ground displacements detected through remote sensing surveys are often used to invert the coseismic slip distribution on geologically reliable fault planes. We analyze a well-known case study (2009 L'Aquila earthquake) to investigate how three-dimensional slip configuration affects coseismic ground surface deformation. Different coseismic slip surface configurations reconstructed using aftershocks distribution and coseismic cracks, were tested using 3-D boundary element method numerical models.
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Frontiers in Earth Science
Advancements in remote sensing, along with greater access to high spatial and temporal resolution imagery, have improved our ability to model glacier surface energy and mass balance in remote regions of complex terrain, such as High-mountain Asia (HMA). In general, net shortwave (SW) radiation accounts for the majority of energy available on a glacier surface during the summer months, suggesting that SW modeling errors can critically impact surface energy balance estimates. In this study, we model the clear-sky SW irradiance for a group of glaciers in the Everest region of HMA using a high-resolution (8-m) digital elevation model (DEM) composite derived from commercial stereo satellite imagery.
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