Geology
Site news
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New maps of the geologic forces contributing to earthquakes in Texas and Oklahoma could help reduce the likelihood of manmade temblors associated with wastewater injection.
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The first large-scale map of rainfall declines revealed by signatures in ancient soil could help researchers better understand profound regional and global climate transformation.
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A new 3-D printing technique developed at Stanford will help pave the way for studying delicate or hard-to-collect rock samples from afar, whether they be from a volcano on Earth or the surface of Mars.
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Jenny Suckale shows us how the behavior of a melting glacier in the Antarctic doesn’t act like a melting ice cube, and why that matters.
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A new method developed by Stanford Earth researchers uses training images to refine models of uncertainty about subsurface processes and structures.
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Recent research by Stanford Earth scientists uses new techniques to shed light on the contentious history of California's iconic mountain range.
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A new algorithm designed to find matching seismic signals in large earthquake databases could find previously missed microquakes.
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The best way to learn science is to actually do it. Students in Stanford Earth's Wrigley Field Program in Hawaii spend the quarter measuring vegetation, coral reefs and volcanoes to understand the dynamics of one of the planet's most interesting ecosystems.