Colegio Oficial de Geólogos
Es una institución sin finalidad lucrativa creada para la defensa y apoyo de los intereses de los Geólogos, es una corporación de Derecho Público, amparada por Ley y reconocida por el Estado, con personalidad jurídica propia y capacidad plena para el ejercicio de sus funciones y cumplimiento de sus fines.
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EFGeoWeek #396 | 12 May 2026

EFGeoWeek #396 | 12 May 2026

EFG
The growing demand for geologists contrasts with declining graduation rates, posing a challenge for talent attraction and retention in the field. This study analyses trends in geology graduates, their career choices, and key factors influencing profess...
 
Seequent
Seequent enables the interpretation of diverse geoscientific data through a holistic approach, helping teams develop a deeper understanding of the subsurface. By informing critical decisions, Seequent ultimately supports smarter and more efficient geot...
 
EFG
During the UNECE Resource Management Week 2026, Rudi Ruggeri, EFG delegate from the Italian National Association CNG (Consiglio Nazionale dei Geologi), has been elected Vice-Chair to the Bureau of the...
 
EFG
The European Federation of Geologists (EFG) has launched its Geoscience Education Manifesto. Produced by the EFG Panel of Experts on Education and led by Panel Coordinator Maria Tzima, it sets […]
 
EFG
The European Federation of Geologists, in collaboration with the Société Géologique de France, has launched a second call for applications for travel grants to support French-speaking students attending LearnGeo 2026. […]
 
We invite professionals, stakeholders, and researchers to join our new Monthly Networking Days, an interactive event format to support collaboration and knowledge sharing on phosphogypsum (PG) valorisation and sustainable waste management.
 
We are launching new tenders within the framework of the GENESIS Project. La Palma Deep Demonstrator (Living Lab) includes...
 
The EU Cyprus Presidency will raise the question during an informal gathering of ministers amid energy security concerns and soaring prices. Gas projects in Greece, Italy, Romania and Poland were flagged as available resources with potential for increa...
 
Iran is believed to have over 440 kilograms of enriched uranium, which could be turned into weapons-grade nuclear material. Despite Trump's pledge to get the "nuclear dust," Tehran has kept it out of US reach.
 
European industry claims that strict environmental protections are stopping it from building.
 
What can warm fluids in arc crust tell us about how much magma is lurking underground? Hydrothermal heat fluxes provide constraints on the supply of magma from the mantle in subduction zones.
 
Artificial Intelligence, and its rapid incursion into the (geo)sciences, was already impossible to ignore at last year’s EGU General Assembly. (you can read my reflections then in this blog post) This year, unsurprisingly, it felt equally present. On T...
 
A landslide in Tracy Arm Fjord in Alaska created the second-largest tsunami on record. A new analysis links this abrupt event to the retreat of a glacier and, ultimately, to climate change.
 
Many people exhibit a strong visual orientation, as a significant portion of human neurobiology is dedicated to processing light; however, this reliance is usually as much a product of our visually-centered environments as it is our biology. Science, h...
 
The latest NASA Juno briefing was presented at EGU26 yesterday. Speakers introduced unprecedented results that not only deepened our understanding of Jupiter but also invited us to reflect on the future of scientific methodology. Whether you’re a space...
 
I grew up watching my dad come home covered in soot. For most of his life, he worked as a firefighter in a natural reserve in Galicia, in northern Spain, a region of green mountains and steep terrain, almost Lord of the Rings in its landscape, but also...
 
EuroGeoSurveys has responded to the European Commission’s Call for Evidence on the targeted revision of the Water Framework Directive, emphasising the importance of subsurface integrated spatial planning to support Europe’s water resilience, critical r...
 
Mount Paektu, a mythic, active volcano on the border between North Korea and China, is almost the epitome of a scientific challenge that crosses political lines. In 946 CE, it erupted in one of the five biggest volcanic events of the past 10,000 years,...
 
Serbia’s fledgling research foundation, financed largely through EU grants and World Bank loans, has hit a major setback just a few years into its existence, with many researchers fearing a major gap in funding as foreign cash dries up.
 
Hungarian academics have spoken out about the negative impact of the EU ruling that bans 30 of the country’s research institutions from accessing Horizon Europe and Erasmus+ funds, with one saying it felt similar to the UK leaving the EU in terms of cu...
 
The £100m project will transform the countryside, boost wildlife and help prevent flooding.
 
New research suggests glacier melt driven by climate change is increasing the risk of giant waves.
 
The city is responsible for 80% of the world's natural history TV shows.
 
BBC producers talk about working with Sir David Attenborough on his 100th birthday.
 
Fossils fascinated Sir David Attenborough throughout his childhood. The BBC retraces the steps of Sir David's formative experiences roaming the British countryside.
 
Between 2000 and 2020, 42% of tree lines around the world crept upward, largely because of climate change. But 25% moved downhill, seemingly because of factors such as land use changes and wildfires.
 
The Turkana Rift Zone in Kenya entered a critical stage in continental breakup about 4 million years ago.
 
Eyes in the sky could help cities get on track to decrease emissions of the potent greenhouse gas—and monitor whether their efforts are working.
 
To slow climate change, the world must keep its fossil fuels in the ground. New maps of Arctic activities show where resources should stay put.
 
Coal mining brings a slew of risks to communities, but “being employed is good for your health.”
 
The gas in hot springs could reveal the very first signs of a new tectonic plate boundary forming.
 
A USC Dornsife-led study found that faults that appear simple can produce surprisingly complex earthquakes.
 
A giant volcanic eruption may have accidentally uncovered a powerful new way to destroy methane and slow global warming
 
ECMWF and WMO report highlights impacts of climate change on people and biodiversity across the fastest-warming continent
 
Agora and RAP could create Europe's largest green transition policy shop
 
Despite the Moon being Earth’s nearest celestial neighbor, many questions about its geology remain unanswered. Recently, China’s Chang’e-5 (2020) and Chang’e-6 (2024) missions returned new basaltic samples, allowing us to make major advances in underst...
 
From hanging out with primates to early climate warnings, here's a selection of his trailblazing programmes.
 
In Ranerou, north-east Senegal, locals and environmental experts are working side by side to improve livelihoods and farming conditions, and protect the region’s biodiversity. They are planting and managing trees to improve soil quality and excavating ...


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