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Deeper Plume Than Thought at Yellowstone
Read more: Deeper Plume Than Thought at YellowstoneHmmm… ScienceDaily (Dec. 14, 2009) — The most detailed seismic images yet published of the plumbing that feeds the Yellowstone supervolcano shows a plume of hot and molten rock rising at an angle from the northwest at a depth of at least 410 miles, contradicting claims that there is no deep plume, only shallow hot rock moving like slowly boiling soup.
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More Gift Ideas
Read more: More Gift IdeasThe Great Dinosaurs by Darren Naish. and for kids… Indiana Jones Lost City Archaeological Treasure Dig
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Join a Ning Site about Micromineral
Read more: Join a Ning Site about MicromineralYou can join this Ning site about Microminerals. They are organizing an international micromineral swap.
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How to Send Web Posts to Your Email
Read more: How to Send Web Posts to Your EmailYou can now sign up to have posts from this web site sent to your email with feedmyinbox.com
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Field Trip: Chicago Academy of Sciences, Sat. 1/23/2009
Read more: Field Trip: Chicago Academy of Sciences, Sat. 1/23/2009The Chicago Academy of Sciences (CAS) and its Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum would like to offer a behind the scenes tour of its museum collections for ESCONI members as a thank you to members (Dianna, Elaine, Jack, Joan, Joe) who contributed their time this past year with an inventory of our paleontology collection. The tour, given by Dawn Roberts, a geologist herself, and the Collections Manager, will focus on the Academy’s natural history collection. The Collections Facility houses 11,000 specimens in the geology collection and 14,000 specimens in the the paleontology collection. The facility contains 250,000 objects in the total…
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Earth Science Gift Books
Read more: Earth Science Gift BooksSome more ideas for gifts for the holiday season… Prehistoric Life: The Definitive Visual History of Life on Earth by DK Publishing Extreme Scientists: Exploring Nature’s Mysteries from Perilous Places by Donna M. Jackson Bodies from the Ice: Melting Glaciers and the Recovery of the Past by James M. Deem The Dinosaurs of Waterhouse Hawkins: An Illuminating History of Mr. Waterhouse Hawkins, Artist and Lecturer by Barbara Kerley And of course, ESCONI books, make a great gift too!
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Musings on 60 Years Of ESCONI by Karen Nordquist
Read more: Musings on 60 Years Of ESCONI by Karen NordquistAs I try to put together a slide show for the 60 year anniversary party, I marvel at what this club has been through over the years. I myself have only been here for about the last ten years having found ESCONI late in my life unfortunately. I seem to have missed the really great years when there was a larger membership with a very active bunch of people running all the groups including not just one Juniors group but several. Those were the good old days. I see that membership was over 600 back in the sixties. What has…
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Linked In Page for Archaeologists
Read more: Linked In Page for ArchaeologistsThe Society for Industrial Archeology has a LinkedIn page, for those of you who use LinkedIn.
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Mineral – Micromount Meeting: Sat., 12/12, 7:30 p.m.
Read more: Mineral – Micromount Meeting: Sat., 12/12, 7:30 p.m.Mineral – Micromount Study Group Meeting, 7:30 pm, Saturday, 12/12, College of Dupage, Building K – Rm 131. Bring three minerals and four labels for the identification contest – fabulous prizes for all! John’s Ice Cream will be served.
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Gift Idea for Earth Science Person
Read more: Gift Idea for Earth Science PersonA new book, Over the Coasts: An Aerial View of Geology, by Michael Collier, may be just that present for the geolgist in your life (or for yourself!)
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A Geologist’s Lifetime Field List
Read more: A Geologist’s Lifetime Field ListWhat would you add to this geologist’s lifetime field list?
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Time to Think About Field Camps and Geo Trips
Read more: Time to Think About Field Camps and Geo TripsList of field camps from geology.com.
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Building Stones of US Capital
Read more: Building Stones of US CapitalInteresting description of building materials used in Washington D.C., including descriptions of the local geology from the USGS.
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Man vs Machine Fossil Identification
Read more: Man vs Machine Fossil IdentificationVia University of Leicester: …A new study pitting academic expertise against a computer in recreating a 425 million-year old jigsaw puzzle has discovered that there is no substitute for wisdom born out of experience. The research tested the reliability of expert identification versus computer analysis in reconstructing fossils. The investigation, based on fossil teeth from extinct vertebrates, found that the most specialized experts provided the most reliable identifications…
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Ancient Atmosphere Linked to Rich Ore
Read more: Ancient Atmosphere Linked to Rich OreVia Science Daily: …Using geochemical clues from rocks nearly 3 billion years old, a group of scientists including Andrey Bekker and Doug Rumble from the Carnegie Institution have made the surprising discovery that the creation of economically important nickel ore deposits was linked to sulfur in the ancient oxygen-poor atmosphere…
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Micro Photos of Pollen
Read more: Micro Photos of PollenAmazing micro photos of pollen from National Geographic.
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Hiking to Bottom of Grand Canyon
Read more: Hiking to Bottom of Grand CanyonNYTimes on visiting the Grand Canyon. …It’s not just a trip out of the human realm, but into the deep geology of the earth. Layer upon layer of the planet’s crust is revealed, stratum by stratum: the Toroweap limestone, the Coconino sandstone, the Redwall limestone, the Tonto Group; the Vishnu schist deep down, close to two billion years old, nearly half the total age of the planet — the stuff that is under our very feet as we go about our lives is laid bare here. And in the silence and stillness, in the solitude of the canyon in winter,…
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Geology Exhibit in Kenosha
Read more: Geology Exhibit in Kenosha“Rocks and Minerals from the Kenosha Public Museum’s Geology Collection” is a new exhibit opening Saturday, Nov. 21, in the Abbott Labs Fund Treasures Gallery at the museum, 5500 First Ave. The exhibit includes examples of gold, silver, copper, geodes and fossils. Specimens from the Upper Middle West are showcased, including phantom calcite from Vulcan Quarry in Racine. The exhibit also features many new additions to the collection. This is the first rocks and minerals display in more than eight years at the museum.
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Holiday Party & General Meeting – Friday, December 4th
Read more: Holiday Party & General Meeting – Friday, December 4thThe annual party will be at Greek Islands West, 300 East 22nd Street, Lombard, IL from 5:30 to 7:30 pm. 1) Bring cash to the Holiday dinner at the Greek Islands. Each table will get a check, so with the exception of one person per table, everyone will be paying in cash. 2) The Secret Santa gift cost should be $15 and if gender specific, please indicate.
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Western Illinois University Paper Published
Read more: Western Illinois University Paper PublishedVia Science News: …The fossil record suggests that sauropods, some of the largest creatures ever to live on land (SN: 6/23/01, p. 397), evolved from a small bipedal dinosaur, says Matthew Bonnan, a vertebrate paleontologist at Western Illinois University in Macomb. Now, Bonnan and his colleagues describe a small sauropod ancestor with features foreshadowing those of more recent relatives. The work appears online November 10 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B…



