Engineering Geology
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Implicit Structural Modeling via Generative Diffusion Frameworks
Announce Type: new Abstract: Implicit structural modeling can support understanding subsurface spatial configurations, revealing patterns of geological evolution, and enabling quantitative simulation of geological processes, thereby offering substantial scientific and engineering value. Conventional approaches formulate it as an optimization problem or framework interpolation to fit a continuous scalar field, whereas machine learning methods typically adopt discriminative regression to...
Measuring massive surge waves along the Illgraben
Measuring massive surge waves along the Illgraben Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL) have, for the first time, been able to record a debris flow over a distance of two kilometers at the Illgraben (VS). The study reveals where and how waves form within the flow and what happens when they pass over check dams. The Illgraben in the canton of Valais is unique in Switzerland: here,...
India’s bullet train project: Nine years later, is the dream finally nearing reality?
When Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe laid the foundation stone for India’s first bullet train project in Ahmedabad in September 2017, the event was presented as more than just the launch of a railway corridor. It was pitched as India’s first major step into the world of high-speed rail — a technology long associated with countries like Japan, China and France. Nearly nine years later, the Mumbai-Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail (MAHSR) corridor remains...
How Artemis II livestreamed hi-def videos and images from the moon to Earth
How Artemis II livestreamed hi-def videos and images from the moon to Earth Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor This April, humanity had front-row seats to space as the Artemis II Orion spacecraft transmitted crystal-clear footage of its historic journey around the moon from more than 250,000 miles (about 402,000 kilometers) back to Earth at speeds on par with home internet connections. The livestreaming of high-definition video and high-resolution photos of the moon...
Dino-killing asteroid may have fueled underground life for 8 million years
Dino-killing asteroid may have fueled underground life for 8 million years Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor The asteroid that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs also created an underground environment suited to supporting new life, and new research suggests it lasted for millions of years longer than previously suspected. The finding has surprised the international team of researchers behind it, who came to their conclusions by pairing sophisticated new analysis...
NASA is building a new space telescope to search for life on nearby planets. What would it see on ancient Earth?
NASA is building a new space telescope to search for life on nearby planets. What would it see on ancient Earth? A new study analyzed how NASA's Habitable Worlds Observatory might be able to confidently spot biosignatures in the atmosphere of a distant ancient Earth.
West Ireland’s magical landscape: where limestone rivers, Hollywood legend and Irish myth converge
The newly designated Joyce Country and Western Lakes Unesco Geopark in Galway and Mayo celebrates a 700-million-year geological history that has produced a unique terrain and rich cultural heritage‘If you take all these springs together in terms of flow, it’s by far the largest in Ireland, and one of the biggest systems in the world,” said Dr Benjamin Thébaudeau, geologist for the newly designated Unesco Joyce Country and Western Lakes Geopark in western Ireland. Over a few days, I...
'De-extincting' the Moa: The audacious bid to bring back the giant bird
There was a time, not so long ago in geological terms, when the forests of New Zealand shook under the weight of something enormous. The moa, flightless, featherless on its neck, standing taller than a basketball hoop, wandered those islands for millions of years before humans arrived and, within a few centuries, hunted it into silence. The largest species stretched past three metres.
Is this the next Artemis crew? A look at the astronauts on NASA's shortlist
Is this the next Artemis crew? A look at the astronauts on NASA's shortlist It's a long list, but there are some front runners. NASA is about to reveal the astronauts who will launch to space on the Artemis 3 mission.
So You Want a Coat of Arms
The first thing you notice upon entering the College of Arms, in London, is a small and incongruously blue statue of a kiwi, clutching a gold axe in its right claw. Sorry, let me try that again: In the odd historic language of heraldry, this is “a kiwi Azure grasping in the dexter foot an ice axe bendwise Or. ”The bird belongs to the coat of arms of Sir Edmund Hillary, a New Zealander, who was part of the first team to conquer Mount Everest.