Featured Articles
Science Article:
Why did the Southern Gulf of California rupture so rapidly?—Oblique divergence across hot, weak lithosphere along a tectonically active margin
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (901KB)
4
GROUNDWORK:
Killer waves on the airwaves: New media, traditional media, and student conceptualization of tsunamis
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (4.1MB)
36
Also in this issue…
See Full-issue PDF (5.4MB) for the following articles.
11 - 2011–2012 Richard Jahns Distinguished Lecturer: Scott F. Burns
11 - 2012 Student Research Grants
12 - Upcoming Award, Recognition & Grant Deadlines
13 - Call for Proposals: Charlotte 2012
14 - GSA Specialty Divisions
16 - Thank You 2011 GeoCorpsTM America Participants, Partners, and Donors!
19 - 2012 GSA Section Meeting Schedule
19 - GSA Section Meeting Mentor Programs
22 - Preliminary Announcement and Call for Papers: 2012 GSA North-Central Section Meeting
26 - GSA Foundation Update
27 - In Memoriam
27 - About People
28 - Penrose Conference Report: Deformation Localization in Rocks: New Advances
30 - Classified Advertising
36 - Groundwork: Killer waves on the airwaves: New media, traditional media, and student conceptualization of tsunamis
38 - Call for Applications: 2012–2013 GSA-USGS Congressional Science Fellowship
ERRATUM: A reference to GSA Special Paper 308 (SPE308) in the Sept. 2011 GSA Today science article by S. Stein et al. (v. 21, no. 9, p. 5) lists W.R. Van Schmus, M.E. Bickford, and A. Turek as volume editors. This is incorrect. The volume editors for SPE308 are Ben A. van der Pluijm and Paul A. Catacosinos. GSA Today regrets this error.
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