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AIPG
The AIPG Headquarters office will be closed Dec. 23-27 and Jan. 1, 2020. Happy Holidays!
AIPG
Annual membership dues are due and payable Jan. 1, 2020 in accordance with the Bylaws. You are encouraged to login to the AIPG Member portion of the website to pay your dues for 2020. To pay your dues go to aipg.org, sign in and click on "Renew Now" at top of page. Pay by credit card (MasterCard, VISA, American Express, Discover) or PayPal. Credit card payments can be taken over the phone (303) 412-6205 or fax your dues statement with credit card information to (303) 253-9220, or mail to AIPG, 1333 W. 120th Ave., Suite 211, Westminster, CO 80234. Call if you have any questions (303) 412-6205 or email aipg@aipg.org.
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AIPG
Make plans now to join us at our 2020 PFAS Seminar that will bring together renowned industry leaders with knowledge on remediating PFAS contaminants in surface water, groundwater, drinking water, wastewater/bio solids and recycled water. Learn what's working now!
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AIPG
Send in your nominations for AIPG National Awards and AIPG Section Leadership Awards by Jan. 15.
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An in-situ colloidal activated carbon barrier is treating PFAS at an Army National Guard site in Michigan. Colloidal activated carbon was selected because it rapidly reduces PFAS by removal from the dissolved mobile phase, and results in lower total project costs when compared to operating a mechanical system. Download the case study.
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AIPG
AIPG Student Scholarship applications for undergraduate and graduate are due Feb. 1.
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AIPG
Past section newsletters are available online.
Date |
Event |
More Information |
Jan. 29-30, 2020
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6th Annual Well Site Automation 2020 |
Houston |
Feb. 8, 2020
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AIPG Arizona Section Event — Tucson, Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase |
Tucson, Arizona |
Feb. 25-26, 2020
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7th Annual Cost-Effective Artificial Lift Strategies Permian Basin 2020 |
Houston |
Feb. 27, 2020
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Beyond the Theoretical: What's Working for PFAS Management? |
Middleton, Wisconsin |
March 20-22, 2020
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GSA Southeastern and Northeastern Sections Annual Meeting — Geoscience Careers for New Geoscience Graduates |
Reston, Virginia |
April 6-10, 2020
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AAG Annual Meeting |
Denver |
April 7-8, 2020
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AIPG Georgia Section 9th Innovative Environmental Assessment and Remediation Technology |
Contact Ron Wallace |
April 20-24, 2020
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The 16th Sinkhole Conference |
San Juan, Puerto Rico |
April 30, 2020
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The 2020 Western South Dakota Hydrology Conferencee |
Rapid City, South Dakota |
May 12-24, 2020
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Geological Society of Nevada 2020 Symposium |
Contact Eric Struhsacker |
Oct. 3-6, 2020
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2020 AIPG National Annual Conference |
Sacramento, California |
| FROM THE AIPG ONLINE STORE |
AIPG
Hanes® men's Beefy-T® long sleeve T-shirt is crafted from 6.1 oz., 100 percent ring-spun cotton for a soft hand with excellent durability. Comes with embroidered AIPG lettering with pick and gavel.

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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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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
U.S. Geological Survey
USGS experts recently released a study that incorporates the latest earthquake science findings into an update of the National Seismic Hazard Model for the "lower-48" United States.
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Nature Scientific Reports
The microbial reduction of nitrate, via nitrite into gaseous di-nitrogen (denitrification) plays a major role in nitrogen removal from aquatic ecosystems. Natural abundance stable isotope measurements can reveal insights into the dynamics of production and consumption of nitrite during denitrification. In this study, batch experiments with environmental bacterial communities were used to investigate variations of concentrations and isotope compositions of both nitrite and nitrate under anoxic conditions.
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UB Now
A new study on the Greenland Ice Sheet shows that it's shrinking at an alarming rate, and highlights the urgency of conducting new research to improve our understanding of how, exactly, the ice sheet is losing mass, says UB expert Beata Csatho. The study, which was published in Nature, provides the most complete picture to date of how the Greenland Ice Sheet has changed in recent decades.
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Northwestern University via ScienceDaily
By measuring the chemistry of fossilized seashells collected in Antarctica, researchers discovered that Earth was already experiencing carbon cycle instability before the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs.
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Space.com
New satellite imagery shows the devastation after a deadly New Zealand volcanic eruption on Dec. 8.
An image from Maxar Technologies show a volcanic plume on the Pacific Ocean's White Island, and what appears to be fresh debris surrounding the caldera from the boulders and ash flung up by the explosion. A comparison image from May 12 (below), also provided by Maxar, shows a more quiescent plume and green vegetation on the edges of the island.
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The Salt Lake Tribune
Upwind from northern Utah's urban centers is a network of lakebeds, dried-up remnants of a vast prehistoric inland sea that dominated the region when the climate was much wetter and cooler that it is today.
Now, as western Utah becomes even drier — from drought, water diversions and climate change — these playas have become a major source of dust settling on Wasatch Front cities and their mountain water sources, according to new research conducted by Brigham Young University geologists.
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Geosciences
To accommodate traffic volume on roads due to ever-increasing population growth, the widening of highways and motorways is in high demand. Nevertheless, the widening of tunnels on these road networks is quite complex due to the presence of numerous rock types, in situ stress, and different widening modes. To overcome these complexities, eight different tunnel shapes were simulated under varying support conditions for asymmetric and symmetric widening.
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Casper Star-Tribune
The Powder, Tongue and Northeast river basins of Wyoming are often called "the NERB," for short.
It's a region that supplies fresh drinking water for about 102,000 Wyomingites — about 17% of the state's population.
A new study released by Wyoming State Geological Survey this month found the NERB will likely continue pumping out clean water for its largely rural community for the foreseeable future.
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 7701 Las Colinas Ridge, Ste. 800, Irving, TX 75063
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