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Monthly Archives: March 2013

Out in the field

Krakatoa revealed? Part three

Posted on March 13, 2013 by Nick • 2 Comments

I’m in Java, Indonesia, filming a documentary on the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa – read part one and part two here. We have spent the last two days filming on and around Anak Krakatau. The boat ride out from the mainland takes about three hours, and we are accompanied by dolphins and the occasional flying … Continue reading →

Out in the field

Krakatoa revealed? Part two

Posted on March 12, 2013 by Nick • 3 Comments

I’m in Java, Indonesia, filming a documentary on the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa – read part one here. Today was a day of mixed blessings. It started well, with filming at the 4th point lighthouse destroyed originally by the 1883 tsunami and rebuilt two years later – such was the importance of the spice trade … Continue reading →

Out in the field

Krakatoa revealed?

Posted on March 11, 2013 by Nick • 3 Comments

So, here I am in Java, Indonesia (again) on my way to shoot a documentary (again) with Pioneer Productions ( I must say I thought they would be sick of me by now) on the 1883 eruption of  Krakatoa. The series is called Top Ten Natural Disasters – Indonesia. On the flight out, in between … Continue reading →

Turning smart phones into student smart phones
Education

Turning smart phones into student smart phones

Posted on March 8, 2013 by sarah • 6 Comments

A guest blog from Layik Hama, University of Leeds ‘I would say that what makes smartphones smart, in large measure, is their sense of location’ Michael T Jones – Google Earth/Maps Smart phones and geoscience fieldwork ought to be a perfect match. Both are about location. Both are becoming increasingly accessible, as smart phones become … Continue reading →

History / Library

Publishing maps: a cautionary tale

Posted on March 4, 2013 by paul • Leave a comment

Visitors to the building may notice an addition to the Lower Library – a display about the fortunes and misfortunes of one the UK’s most famous geologists never to be a Fellow, William Smith. Smith’s most celebrated achievement, the first geological map of a complete country, now hangs in our entrance hall, but he didn’t … Continue reading →

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