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Category Archives: Features

Four female geologists who deserve £50 note fame!
Features / History

Four female geologists who deserve £50 note fame!

Posted on November 21, 2018 by sarah • 2 Comments

Earlier this month, the Bank of England announced it would be selecting a new face of the £50 note, which has featured steam engine industrialists Matthew Boulton and James Watt since 2011. The scientific community was excited to learn that the new note will feature a scientist – and the public have been invited to … Continue reading →

Military geology: an innovation of the 1914-18 World War
Features / History / Publishing

Military geology: an innovation of the 1914-18 World War

Posted on November 9, 2018 by sarah • 2 Comments

A guest post from Ted Rose, Honorary Research Fellow at Royal Holloway’s Department of Earth Sciences On 11 November 1918 the guns fell silent on the Western Front, and the First World War horrors of trench warfare came to an end. The centenary of that armistice will be widely celebrated and much featured in the … Continue reading →

The destructive power of a slow-moving landslide
Features / Publishing

The destructive power of a slow-moving landslide

Posted on October 2, 2018 by sarah • 3 Comments

Recent research published in the Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology provides insight into the destruction caused by ground movements at Pissouri Cyrpus Continue reading →

#PlateTecStories: Shifting theory at the Royal Institution
Features / History

#PlateTecStories: Shifting theory at the Royal Institution

Posted on April 4, 2018 by sarah • Leave a comment

A guest blog from The Royal Institution about the ways in which the Ri have communicated the science and importance of plate tectonics through time. Continue reading →

The Cheshire Energy Research Field Site
Features

The Cheshire Energy Research Field Site

Posted on February 22, 2018 by sarah • Leave a comment

Just as during the space age astronomers wanted to create the Jodrell Bank Observatory to discover some of the secrets of the universe, 70 years later geoscientists want to create an observatory that can look into our own planet to discover new solutions for global problems. Continue reading →

A Blog 400 Million Years in the Making
Features

A Blog 400 Million Years in the Making

Posted on February 2, 2018 by sarah • Leave a comment

A guest blog from geologist and science communicator Haydon Mort. Continue reading →

Attenborough and the Sea Dragon
Education / Features / Interviews

Attenborough and the Sea Dragon

Posted on January 22, 2018 by Amy Ball • 2 Comments

Fiann Smithwick, scientific adviser and part of the fossil excavation team for the BBC 1 documentary ‘Attenborough and the Sea Dragon’, speaks to us about his experiences working on a natural history documentary with Sir David Attenborough, his fossil hunting and his PhD topic of fossil colour… Continue reading →

A geologist’s holiday – the 2017 Aegean earthquake
Features

A geologist’s holiday – the 2017 Aegean earthquake

Posted on November 28, 2017 by sarah • 1 Comment

As tremors continue in the Aegean, the British Geological Survey’s Debbie Rayner recounts her experience of a magnitude 6.6 earthquake which struck during a family holiday on Kos earlier this year… Continue reading →

The future of plate tectonics research: The International Ocean Discovery Program
Education / Features

The future of plate tectonics research: The International Ocean Discovery Program

Posted on November 3, 2017 by sarah • Leave a comment

A guest post from Dr Lloyd White, Lecturer in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Wollongong, Australia, who is currently on board the JOIDES Resolution research vessel as part of the International Ocean Discovery Program. Continue reading →

The Country That Shook: Nepal two years after the earthquake
Features

The Country That Shook: Nepal two years after the earthquake

Posted on June 6, 2017 by sarah • Leave a comment

A guest post from artist Sophie Maliphant about her project to raise money for Nepal following the devastating 2015 earthquake. Continue reading →

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