It is an IN-PERSON meeting only. We will begin with a talk by Sarah Hall (AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellow) on ‘(Un)Well stories: Private well water quality in coastal Maine’. Next up will be Bonnie McDevitt (USGS) on ‘Radium mineral associations within abandoned mine drainage relevant to the future of critical mineral extraction’. The final talk of the evening will be presented by Rebecca Stokes (USGS) on ‘The role of graphite in a changing energy landscape: a geological perspective’. Abstracts of the talks, and biographies of the speakers, are here. Come at 7:30 PM to socialize and imbibe, the meeting begins at 8 PM, and ends by 10 PM.
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“We’re dealing with something truly enormous....It would certainly represent the largest marine reptile formally described.”
Who remembers this?
Meet Tuesday’s Tiny Trilobites
Nice day for a bike ride over some “fat buttery clay.” 🧈🚴🏾
yeah Earth’s eclipses are cool but every time the moon Io gets eclipsed by Jupiter its whole volcanically powered atmosphere freezes up and deflates like a sulphuric balloon, then reinflates again when sunlight vaporizes its volcanic frost into angry gases.
Space is wild.