IEEE Earthzine’s fourth year of live coverage at OCEANS in Charleston, SC begins October 22nd, 2018. Brandy Armstrong, IEEE OESOctober 16, 2018The theme at the OCEANS 2018 Charleston conference is “Healthy Oceans, Resilient Coasts, Robust Commerce…Strong Nations.” The October 22-25th, 2018 event is sponsored by the Marine Technology Society (MTS) and the IEEE Oceanic Engineering Society (OES) will include tutorials, workshops, … Read More
Mitigating Flooding and Drought through Data for Decision-Making
GEOGLOWS projects seek to connect emergency managers, governments with data ahead of flooding
This article is part of a series covering GEO Week in Washington, D.C., Oct. 23-27.
Saildrones, Canoes, and Smartfins at Oceans 17
Earthzine is covering the Oceans 17 conference in Anchorage, Alaska.
Anchorage Bound: IEEE Earthzine Delivers Third Year of Live Coverage from Oceans 17
IEEE Earthzine’s third year of live coverage at Oceans 17 in Anchorage, Alaska, begins Sept. 18.
The Legacy of Cassini as it Comes to a Crashing End
Cassini will dive into Saturn this month, leaving a rich legacy of ground-breaking data.
Earthzine Writing Fellowship Dives into the Ocean, One Story at a Time
IEEE Earthzine’s 2017 Writing Fellowship, sponsored by XPRIZE, engages students and early career professionals on ocean exploration through storytelling. Their first assignment was to interview each other.
Millions of mysterious 'sea pickles' swamp US west coast
Huge and unexplained bloom has fishers racing to save their nets, and scientists hurrying to study the rare animal
Ice Cubes Allow Modular ISS Expirements
Human spaceflight and robotic exploration image of the week: Ice Cube commercial service in Columbus space laboratory mockup
Volcanic crystals give a new view of magma
Volcanologists are gaining a new understanding of what’s going on inside the magma reservoir that lies below an active volcano and they’re finding a colder, more solid place than previously thought, according to new research published June 16 in the journal Science.
Satellites forewarn of locust plagues
Satellites are helping to predict favourable conditions for desert locusts to swarm, which poses a threat to agricultural production and, subsequently, livelihoods and food security.