This message was sent to ##Email##
|
|
|
|
American Geosciences Institute
Since the 1970s, an increasing number of economic geology theses and dissertations in the U.S. and Canada have focused on energy sources. Until the 1990s, however, more than half of all economic geology dissertations and nearly half of all economic geology theses focused on ore deposits. In the 1990s, half of all economic geology theses and 70% of all economic geology dissertations were focused on energy sources, and in the past decade, those percentages have increased to 84% and 86%, respectively.
READ MORE
AIPG

Register | Exhibitor Form | Sponsor Form | Conference Hotel Info | Abstracts | Technical Presentations
Full registration includes Welcome Reception and Foundation of AIPG Silent Auction on Sunday, Technical Sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday, Poster Session on Monday, Lunch within Keynote Speaker on Monday, Lunch on Tuesday, and Breaks with food and beverages on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Thank you to all of our Sponsors and Exhibitors! Still time to sponsor or exhibit!
Bring cash and your checkbook for the Foundation of AIPG Silent Auction on Sunday, Sept. 15, starting at 5:30 p.m., in the Exhibit Area of the Annual Meeting at the DoubleTree, 870 Williston Road, Burlington, VT 05403. See you there!
Promoted by
|
|
|
 |
Date |
Event |
More Information |
Sept. 12-13
|
Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Groundwater Geochemistry (900 mins.) |
Mars, Pennsylvania |
Sept. 14-17
|
AIPG 2019 Annual Conference, in Burlington, Vermont |
Presentation Schedule |
Sept. 15
|
Foudation of AIPG Silent Auction |
Contact Barbara Murphy |
Sept. 16-17
|
Introduction to Inorganic and Organic Groundwater Geochemistry (900 mins.) |
Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania |
Sept. 16-17
|
6th Annual New Technologies For Lower Cost, More Efficient On Shore Well Site Facilities 2019 |
Houston |
Sept. 17-19
|
6th Annual New Technologies For Lower Cost, More Efficient On Shore Well Site Facilities 2019 |
Houston |
Sept. 17-22
|
Association of Environmental & Engineering Geologists 62nd Annual Meeting |
Asheville, North Carolina |
Sept. 21
|
Student and Your Professionals Career Workshop |
Phoenix |
Oct. 13-19
|
Earth Science Week |
Contest information |
Oct. 23
|
AIPG Illinois-Indiana Section Fall 2019 Section Meeting and Annual Vendor Technology & Networking Night |
Lisle, Illinois |
Oct. 24
|
Bedrock Wells: Fundamentals, Regulations, Protection, and Exploration |
Webinar |
Oct. 31
|
Bedrock Wells: Construction, Testing, and Life-cycle Case Studies |
Webinar |
Feb. 8, 2020
|
AIPG Arizona Section Event — Tucson, Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase |
Tucson, Arizona |
April 20-24, 2020
|
The 16th Sinkhole Conference |
San Juan, Puerto Rico |
May 12-24, 2020
|
Geological Society of Nevada 2020 Symposium |
Contact Eric Struhsacker |
| FROM THE AIPG ONLINE STORE |
AIPG
This sport tek T-shirt is made of moisture wicking double-layered poly mesh that provides superior moisture control for the most active circumstances.
Available colors: black, dark green, maroon, navy, red, royal, steel grey and white. Available sizes: small through 4XL.
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 fun-loving choice that's a true fashion accessory, with 100 percent cotton, three-panel construction, self-fabric sweatband and stitched eyelets. Lightly brushed to soften the fabric and color. Available colors: black, navy, khaki and white.
READ MORE
Frontiers in Earth Science
The understanding of magma ascent dynamics is essential in forecasting the scale, style and timing of volcanic eruptions. The monitoring of near-field deformation is widely used to gain insight into these dynamics, and has been linked to stress changes in the upper conduit.
READ MORE
U.S. Geological Survey
On July 25, a helicopter pilot flying a U.S.Geological Survey mission over Kīlauea noticed an unusual green patch at the bottom of Halema'uma'u, the crater at the summit of the volcano.
Passengers on the helicopter reported to the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory that the smooth green patch looked like water. But with no reflection from its surface, its origin was questioned: was it water, or was it a flat surface made by ash or rockfall dust tinted green by sulfur minerals or algae?
READ MORE
National Geographic
Scientists have long known California's Wilmington fault is present — stretching 12.4 miles under southern Los Angeles into San Pedro Bay. But it was presumed to have sat quiet for millions of years.
Now, a new analysis of the system, published in Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, suggests that isn't the case. Using a cluster of clues incorporated into a three-dimensional model, the study authors posit that the fault has been active much more recently than once thought.
READ MORE
Geosciences
Traditional sheep and cattle grazing in natural semiarid Mediterranean, Asian and African regions is based on night corrals, where animal secretions accumulate. Lack of management and disregard for the long-term effects of using the same sites for corrals on underground soil characters may negatively affect soil values. This locally increases the content of organic matter and nutrients such as nitrogen, potassium, phosphorus and others that are stockpiled in the corrals.
READ MORE
Minerals
Polymineralic inclusions in megacrysts have been reported to occur in kimberlites worldwide. The inclusions are likely the products of early kimberlite melt(s) which invaded the pre-existing megacryst minerals at mantle depths (i.e., at pressures ranging from 4 to 6 GPa) and crystallized or quenched upon emplacement of the host kimberlite.
READ MORE
Water
Estimation of unsaturated hydraulic conductivity could benefit many engineering or research problems such as water flow in the vadose zone, unsaturated seepage and capillary barriers for underground waste isolation. The unsaturated hydraulic conductivity of a soil is related to its saturated hydraulic conductivity value as well as its water retention behavior.
READ MORE
Florida State University via ScienceDaily
For years, scientists struggled to connect a mechanism to this mass extinction, one of the 10 most dramatic ever recorded in Earth's history. Now, researchers have confirmed that this event, referred to by scientists as the Lau/Kozlowskii extinction, was triggered by an all-too-familiar culprit: rapid and widespread depletion of oxygen in the global oceans.
READ MORE
Frontiers in Earth Science
The extensive detrital zircon U-Pb geochronologic dataset presented here includes new and compiled data (N = 38; n = 8,006) from modern rivers that together comprehensively characterizes the geographic distribution of pervasive Mesozoic-Cenozoic igneous belts across mountainous regions in south-central Alaska, including the northern Chugach Mountains, Talkeetna Mountains and western, central and eastern Alaska Range.
READ MORE
EarthSky
The mystery of Mars' methane has been in the news again lately, starting with a study announced in mid-August saying it's likely not caused by wind erosion of rocks. Now, another new study has refined estimates of methane gas in Mars' atmosphere, showing how concentrations change over the course of a single Martian day. This new study redefines our understanding of how the concentration of methane in the atmosphere of Mars changes over time, and this helps us to solve the bigger mystery of what the source might be.
READ MORE
The Conversation via Phys.org
The study of the fossil record often upsets our preconceptions and constantly raises questions, almost as if we are regularly discovering a "new" planet. Indeed, whether it is at the beginning of the birth of life on Earth or in the great episodes of the evolution of the Paleozoic (the Primary Era) and the Mesozoic (the Secondary Era), many forms of life very different from those we know today emerged, developed and had their time of glory.
READ MORE
|
|
|
|
 50 Minthorn Blvd.Suite 800, Thornhill, Ontario L3T 7X8
|