Monday, August 03, 2020

Podcast: Developing Engaging and Health-Informed Learning Environments


In this episode of Michigan Minds, Ben van der Pluijm, Bruce R. Clark Collegiate Professor of Geology and Professor of the Environment at the University of Michigan, discusses how he plans to develop a dynamic and engaging learning environment for his students during the public health-informed semester this fall, which will feature a hybrid approach to education.

"It's about partnering."



August 2020


Friday, July 24, 2020

Seismic noise from humans at a record low due to COVID-19 lockdown rules

A seismometer is a device that’s usually used to measure earthquakes using vibrations in the earth. But recently, researchers have been using them to measure human movement.  A global study published in this week's Science shows that seismic noise is at an all time low, as a result of COVID-19 related lockdowns.


The study takes data from researchers from all over the world. Human activity produces vibrations as we move around, creating “a near-continuous signal especially on seismometers in urban environments.” Human influence on seismometers reflects “a wide variety of activities happening at different times and places at or near the Earth’s surface.” According to the study, the entire world has seen a months-long reduction in seismic noise of 50%, the longest such period on record.

Ben van der Pluijm is a geologist at the University of Michigan. He says anthropogenic noise, or human-produced noise, has always been a component in measuring data from seismometers.

“We’ve always known there’s a significant component of ‘societal noise,’ as I like to call it. But we’ve never had an experiment whereby we could see what it was like without that noise. This gave us an opportunity to see now really, what is the contribution of society on the measurements we have on our equipment, but also allowed us to fine tune what kind of noises we have," he said. "It works both ways, we could also see whether people were actually following the rules.”

Van der Pluijm installed seismometers in Michigan Stadium and in his office building on central campus in Ann Arbor back in 2018. He was able to see the change in noise after Governor Gretchen Whitmer issued her "stay at home order" back in March.

“The unit that’s located in Michigan Stadium only saw maybe about a 30% reduction, whereas the unit that was stationed on Central Campus where buildings were vacated and people were no longer at all moving around saw more than 50% reduction.”

He says the reduction on campus was larger than the stadium probably because Michigan Stadium is located at the intersection of two fairly busy roads.

“We don’t have any units that showed zero noise, by the way. There is always noise. Industry, and there’s always transportation, but a reduction of more than 50% is quite remarkable.”

Van der Pluijm says as lockdown rules are lifted, he has been able to see seismic noise tick back up on his equipment.

“It was a unique situation because we’ve never been able to turn off society.”

By CAROLINE LLANES, Michigan Radio

Global quieting of high-frequency seismic noise due to COVID-19 pandemic lockdown measures.
Lecocq et al., Science, 23 Jul 2020; DOI: 10.1126/science.abd2438

Friday, May 01, 2020

eGEW-GeoTrips: Enhanced GoogleEarthWeb virtual fieldtrips with image, video, hotlinks and voice

Alert:  Google suddenly (May 2021) disallowed html use of the 'onclick' function in Google Earth Web, so our code had to be adjusted accordingly.  Google has since reversed this change, but we nonetheless use the new, robust code in the lastest blog (October 2021)


In support of this spring and summer's new normal where field trips have become virtual and toward course-based geology explorations, we developed an enhanced Google Earth Web environment, using my Maryland Appalachians fieldtrip as an example.
Here is a 10min presentation on enhancedGEW that describes GeoTrips and GeoExplorations.  The latter adds globe overlay functionality: http://resilience.earth.lsa.umich.edu/eGEW/eGEW.mp4
Whereas based on it, this not standard Google Earth Web, as that only allows limited images and text add-on to the navigation environment, nor is eGEW a local resource intensive Google Earth desktop application.  Instead, eGEW-GeoTrips runs from the web on any desktop, tablet or phone using your browser.  It offers greatly enhanced GEW functionality, with files loaded from the web (public html server) as needed, so no local files or programs are necessary.


Click on <Present> to start.

The brains of the project is Josh Williams (@geteach), who wrote GEW templates that replace the default GEW that Google supplies.  eGEW allows images, video, StreetView, GigaPan, hotlinks and voice narration in a single Info Panel of FullScreen and NewFeature, while retaining the cool navigation of Google Earth (including StreetView).

Replace the example links to public webserver-based image, video and voice files, and don't otherwise touch the html code.  Copy and paste in GEW, and voila...

eGEW-GeoTrips: New Feature/Add Placemark and FullScreen Templates 

Codes by Josh Williams (@geteach) 
Applications by Ben van der Pluijm (@vdpluijm) 

New Feature - Instructions 

Change highlighted parts with links to your own pics, video, audio and text (where code is highlighted only). Copy and paste (no formatting) in the New Feature text box after “Switch to HTML” under More Actions (overwrite anyhting in the box). Select "Large Info Box" option.  Instructions to replace the Full Screen panel with added functionality are slightly different (also below).

Rename the CarouselVideoAudioTemplate.html file for each New Feature (for example "Stop2-4-folds.html") and make changes with a text editor (like Notebook). Save as .html file in text editor (not Word formatted .docx file) 

Note: You will find the original templates and explanations by Josh Williams on GitHub: https://github.com/geteach/geteachGeology.  The file below is slightly modified.

----------------------------------------------
to be added
---------------------------------

Full Screen - Instructions 

Change highlighted parts with links to your own pics, video, audio and text (where highlighted only). Copy and paste (no formatting) in the New Feature text box after “Switch to HTML” under More Actions (empty the box) and use "Large Info Panel". 

Rename the FullScreenTemplate.html file for each Full Screen (for example stop Geology.html) and make changes in text editor (like Notebook). Save as .html file in a text editor (not Word formatted .docx file) 

Note: You will find the original templates and explanations by Josh Williams on GitHub: https://github.com/geteach/geteachGeology.  The file below is slightly modified.

---------------------------
to be added
--------------------

Thursday, February 20, 2020

All Together Now: Reflecting on Earth’s Future’s Formative Years

A little over six years ago I took the reins of AGU’s then-new journal Earth’s Future. The AGU committee that appointed me as Editor in Chief told me to make the journal matter to a broad swath of the geosciences community, to serve the public debate about our shared future, and not to screw up AGU’s venture into open-access publishing. With that rousing endorsement, a dozen papers in the hopper, and a small team of newly minted editors, we embarked on that journey in late 2013. We set the stage in an Editorial, Earth's Future: Navigating the science of the Anthropocene.

Image compilation from the December 2019 issue of Earth’s Future. C
lockwise from top: Subbotina/Depositphotos, YuliyaKirayonakBO/Depositphotos,
Syda_Productions/Depositphotos, Kesu01/ Depositphotos

Earth’s Future is a transdisciplinary science journal that examines the state of the planet and its inhabitants, resilient societies, sustainability, and predictions of our future. It assesses the challenges and opportunities of an era marked by human domination of Earth’s environment, resources and ecosystems. Recognizing Earth as an interconnected and evolving system, publications inform researchers, policy makers and the public on the science of the Anthropocene.

Our first few years saw limited submissions, as expected, because the journal was new and untried, and used the open-access model for publication—the author pays. Several outstanding publications quickly left a mark, however. We published pioneering papers on climate warming, sea-level rise, ocean plastics, fossil-fuel power plant emissions, food, coastal inundation and water sustainability challenges, cementing the goals, scope and values of the journal. Only modest AGU/Wiley charges helped to convince authors to adopt the open-access publication model for their research outcomes.

In addition to traditional scientific papers, we encouraged a novel type of short- and long-form scientific commentaries offering perspectives based on data analysis, distinguishing them from opinion pieces in newspapers, magazines and blogs. Dozens of these vignettes were published, focusing on the challenges and responsibilities of modern human society, and serving the need for authoritative insights for a broad audience.

Recognizing that societal resilience is underrepresented in the scientific debate, we encouraged articles that deal with the immediate impacts of environmental change; for example, Toward a Resilient Global Society: Air, Sea Level, Earthquakes, and Weather.
We also decided to be open to publishing papers on controversial science and solutions, such as solar radiation management and carbon dioxide removal, and raised the alarm about underreported challenges, such as nuisance flooding, and the compound impact of cascading hazards.

Many of these publications were able to catch the public eye, including front-page coverage in major news outlets.

The quality of early publications quickly grew the reputation and impact of the journal, and, after only a few years, we were receiving more than 250 papers per year. The evaluation of submissions benefits from excellent reviews and critical assessment by a small team of informed Editors (we chose not have Associate Editors on our Editorial Board), resulting in an average paper acceptance rate of about 40%.

The reach of Earth’s Future papers is quantitatively measured by journal citations, which have similarly been growing. By late 2019, the journal had published more than 400 papers since its launch and had a two-year impact factor of 5.8. These metrics place the journal in the elite upper 10% of peer publications.

An equally important measure of impact is reference to published papers in the media, both professional and social, which is tracked by Altmetric scores. Postings about scientific studies on Twitter, Facebook and blogs, reach engaged citizens and reporters, as well as the scientific community, and really have a positive knock-on effect on the journal. Likewise, press releases by the authors’ institution or by AGU’s press team have furthered the visibility of many studies.

I have passed the Editor in Chief baton into the steady hands of Amir Aghakouchak, who has been part of the journal’s editorial team. AGU’s Council provided a framework for the journal when it started in 2013. We evolved its vision and the journal’s future under new management is bright.

I wish to thank my fellow Editors, AGU staff, our amazing authors, and committed reviewers for enabling a rewarding personal journey and making Earth’s Future a leading voice in support of today’s debates about our planet and our future. Its scientific contributions will continue to move the public conversation, promote informed decision-making and encourage urgent actions, as we continue through the Early Anthropocene.

—Ben van der Pluijm (vdpluijm@umich.edu), University of Michigan

Citation: van der Pluijm, B. (2020), All together now: Reflecting on Earth’s Future’s formative years, Eos, 101, https://doi.org/10.1029/2020EO140395. Published on 20 February 2020.