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Was Six-Million-Year-Old Turd Auctioned for $10,000 a Faux Poo? | This past Saturday, a private collector paid $10,370 at auction for what was touted as a six-million-year-old turd. Billed in the auction house catalog as fossil feces measuring "an eye-watering 40 inches in length" and believed to be "possibly the longest example of coprolite… |
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California Expected to Set Water Restrictions | In an attempt to help curb the impact of a three-year drought, California is likely to soon issue a first-time mandatory water restriction. |
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How science and the community intersect: inside the Center for Service-Learning newsletter | |||
Amos to discuss research on earthquakes, groundwater use May 16 on campus | |||
Pulling Water Out of the Ground May Lead to Quakes on the San Andreas Fault | Earthquakes happen every day as the world’s tectonic plates slip, slide, crash and spread. Most are small or happen far away from people. And though scientists have named the faults where most of this action happens, people rarely pay attention unless a major earthquake occurs. One fault,… |
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Water extraction for human use boosts California quakes | A new study suggests that the heavy use of ground water for pumping and irrigation is causing mountains to lift and valleys to subside. The scientists say this depletion of the water is increasing seismic activity along the San Andreas fault. |
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Increase in earthquakes may be tied to groundwater pumping | For years, scientists have wondered what are the forces that keep pushing up California's mighty Sierra Nevada and central coast ranges, causing an increase in the number of earthquakes in parts of Central California. On Wednesday, a group of scientists offered a new intriguing… |
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Study says irrigation can stress San Andreas Fault | Excessive groundwater pumping for irrigation in California’s agricultural belt can stress the San Andreas Fault, potentially increasing the risk of future small earthquakes, a new study suggests. |
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Geologist: groundwater depletion, quakes linked | |||
In memoriam: Chris Suczek, 1942 - 2014 |