Profile
Search
Recent Posts
- Blog vacation
- Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- Other people who are blogging about AGU
- Levels of expertise and peer review: when is it ok to criticize the process?
- Going to AGU? Want to talk about geoblogging?
- Reading the scientific literature for research ideas?
- About those Donors Choose giving cards...
- Bloggers at the American Geophysical Union meeting
- What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Geologic causes vs geologic triggers
Recent Comments
- Zuska on Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- Anne Jefferson on Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- Christina Pikas on Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- ReBecca on Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- Cian on Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- claire on Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version
- VolcanoMan on Levels of expertise and peer review: when is it ok to criticize the process?
- Adam Mann on Other people who are blogging about AGU
- Marcus on Levels of expertise and peer review: when is it ok to criticize the process?
- John Hawks on Levels of expertise and peer review: when is it ok to criticize the process?
Archives
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
Blogroll
Geoblogs
- Accidental Remediation
- The Accretionary Wedge
- Arizona Geology
- Beyond the Moho
- Christie at the Cape
- Chuck Bailey's Blog
- Clastic Detritus
- Cr!key Creek
- Dinochick Blog
- Dino Jim's Musings
- The Dynamic Earth
- Earth and Mind
- Earthly Musings
- Eruptions
- The Ethical Paleontologist
- Geologic Frothings
- Geology News
- Geotripper
- Green Gabbro
- Harmonic Tremors
- Highly Allochthonous
- Hypo-theses
- Jill Schneiderman
- Johannes Lochmann
- Landslides under Microscope
- Looking for Detachment
- Lounge of the Lab Lemming
- The Lost Geologist
- Magma Cum Laude
- More Grumbine Science
- Mountain Cat Geology
- The Musings of a Life-Long Scholar
- Ni-eosyncline
- NOVA Geoblog
- Oblate Spheroid
- Olelog
- On the Slide
- The Reef Tank
- Ripples in Sand
- Rising to the Occasion
- Roads of Stone
- Ron Schott's Geology Home Companion
- Sismordia
- Stories in Stone
- Teaching the Earth Sciences
- Through the Sandglass
- The Volcanism Blog
- Wooster Geologists
- Adventures in Ethics and Science
- Aguanomics
- Aquafornia
- The Big Picture
- Chance of Rain
- Coyote Crossing
- Female Science Professor
- The Intersection
- John Fleck
- Open Mind
- Real Climate
- Sciencewomen
- USGS image gallery
- USGS earthquakes
- Global Volcanism Program
- USGS river conditions
- Ron Blakey's paleogeographic maps
- Rick Allmendinger's software
- OneGeology
- Map-a-Planet
- Geological Society of America
- American Geophysical Union
- Mineralogical Society of America
- Association for Women Geoscientists
- Council on Undergraduate Research
- National Association of Geoscience Teachers
- Science Education Resource Center
Other blogs
Geolinks
« Levels of expertise and peer review: when is it ok to criticize the process? | Main | Women-in-geoscience and blogs presentation: the blog version »
Other people who are blogging about AGU
Category: conferences
Posted on: December 16, 2009 8:04 PM, by Kim Hannula
The American Geophysical Union has its own blog. It's staffed, not by AGU employees (for the most part), but by Science Communication grad students from the University of California at Santa Cruz and Columbia University. And the students are doing a wonderful job - interesting, engaging, scientifically accurate stories from all corners of AGU. I hope that there are jobs out there for Adam Mann, Tia Ghose, Olga Kuchment, Ale Borunda, Daniel Strain, Gwyneth Dickey, and Sandra Chung, because they're good at what they're doing.
And in the rest of the geoblogosphere, Dave Petley of Dave's Landslide Blog is going to sessions on natural hazards, Julian of Harmonic Tremors is going to sessions on seismology, and the Life-Long Scholar is at petrology sessions. Oh, and #AGU09 is a hot topic of discussion on twitter. (Some discussion of science; some discussion of beer. Geologists.)
TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/127331



Comments
Thanks for noticing our work, Kim, and nice blog, especially the title!
Posted by: Adam Mann | December 16, 2009 11:36 PM