Showing Results for
- All Content Types
- Academic Journals (290)
Search Results
- 290
Academic Journals
- 290
- 1From:Journal of College Science Teaching (Vol. 52, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedEquity, as we define it, means striving to serve the needs of others and enhancing belonging by focusing on "whole humans" in emotional, sociocultural, and personal contexts. Integrating equitable practices in STEM...
- 2From:Geoscience Communication (Vol. 5, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedGeology is colonial. It has a colonial past and a colonial present. Most of the knowledge that we accept as the modern discipline of geology was founded during the height of the post-1700 European empire's colonial...
- 3From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week2022 JUN 18 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Investigators discuss new findings in geology. According to news reporting out of Henan, People's Republic of China, by...
- 4From:Land (Vol. 11, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedThe development of geoeducation generates a link between people, landscapes, and their culture by recognising the geological potential around geosites and their conservation. Geosites have important scientific value and...
- 5From:Environmental Law Reporter (Vol. 52, Issue 5)SUMMARY Humans are inescapably dependent upon geological processes and structures. Many of these interactions are direct, such as when we cultivate the soil or mine the earth. However, the terms of our interaction with...
- 6From:Victorian Studies (Vol. 64, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedNo reader of Elizabeth Carolyn Miller's masterful book, Extraction Ecologies and the Literature of the Long Exhaustion (2021), can emerge from its pages untouched by a sense of the expansive presence of her arguments....
- 7From:Victorian Studies (Vol. 64, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedGeology, for many nineteenth-century subjects, promised abundance. James Hutton's 1788 observation that scientists could find "no vestige of a beginning--no prospect of an end" to planetary time was taken up by...
- 8From:Advances in Civil Engineering (Vol. 2022) Peer-ReviewedDrawing the engineering sections automatically and efficiently is significant for the investigation results of geotechnical engineering to provide the scientific and detailed geological basis for urban planning and...
- 9From:Atlantic Geoscience (Vol. 58) Peer-ReviewedVIRTUAL The Annual Technical Meeting was held virtually on February 21 and 22, 2022, from various home offices, dens, and bedrooms across St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, and beyond. This year the meeting...
- 10From:Atlantic Geoscience (Vol. 58) Peer-ReviewedThe shift to online learning in Nova Scotia during the 2020-2021 academic year forced faculty to digitize activities that would traditionally be done using paper and pen. This included geology labs, which needed to be...
- 11From:Geoscience Communication (Vol. 4, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe COVID-19 pandemic hindered the ability to conduct field geology courses in a hands-on and boots-on traditional manner. In response, we designed a multi-part virtual field module that encompasses many of the basic...
- 12From:Geoscience Communication (Vol. 4, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe Covid-19 pandemic occurred at a time of major revolution in the geosciences - the era of digital geology. Digital outcrop models (DOMs) acquired from consumer drones, processed using user-friendly photogrammetric...
- 13From:Earth Sciences History (Vol. 40, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWe present an interpretation of how natural geological and meteorological events influenced the cosmovision of the Mapuche people from south-central Chile. These events resulted from the geodynamic conditions and related...
- 14From:Earth Sciences History (Vol. 40, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis contribution, in two parts, addresses a long-standing problem in the history of geology: Was the geological theory of James Hutton derived inductively from observations and scientific knowledge, or was it derived a...
- 15From:Earth Sciences History (Vol. 40, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedMalta, an island in the central Mediterranean Sea, was fortified as a base for the Knights Hospitaller 1530-1798 and to provide major harbours for the British Royal Navy after 1813. Men with British military associations...
- 16From:Earth Sciences History (Vol. 40, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAnniversaries for the two founding fathers of geology occurring in the same year prompted a comparative evaluation of how the two contributed to establishing the basic principles of the discipline. To do so, passages...
- 17From:Atlantic Geology (Vol. 57) Peer-ReviewedOver the past decade, there has been a dramatic expansion in the availability of digitized versions of materials typically used in teaching geology labs (e.g., rock and mineral samples, sediment, and thin sections). The...
- 18From:Earth Sciences History (Vol. 40, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedMilitary applications of geology became apparent within the United Kingdom during the nineteenth century, and were developed during the First World War and more extensively during the Second, incidentally by some...
- 19From:Geoscience Communication (Vol. 3, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedCentral Italy has some of the most complex geology in the world. In the midst of this inscrutable territory, two people emerged - St. Francis and Giotto - and they would ultimately change the history of ecology,...
- 20From:Geoscience Communication (Vol. 3, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedGeoscientists and non-geoscientists often struggle to communicate with each other. In this paper we aim to understand how geoscientists and non-geoscientists perceive geological concepts and activities, that is, how...