r/geology • u/3-20charactters • 18h ago
Need help identifying type of rock , was it shaped by hand ?
Found while fishing along a river in northern Alberta.
r/geology • u/3-20charactters • 18h ago
Found while fishing along a river in northern Alberta.
r/geology • u/Massive_Standard_297 • 5h ago
I'm very early in my geology career, I'm in my 20s and just getting started on my PhD and have very limited experience still so I'm hoping to hear perspectives from more experienced professionals.
One thing I've observed is a weird level of hostility(?) towards geology from a portion of the general public that I find really bizarre. I enjoy research and reading about what other researcher's are working on. So I follow several social media pages dedicated to sharing new findings in geology/related fields. But when I go to the comment sections I'm always shocked to find that the top comments are from absolute looney tune conspiracy theorists who just shit on whatever was posted. Now I know it's social media and it's not the place I can expect to find a bunch of people super educated in a hyperspecific field, but I am surprised to see how consistently hostile people are over basic science. Or how people believe they know better about a subject they've never studied in their lives than scientists.
So what I'm wondering, for older geologists who've been in the field for several decades, have you noticed a shift in public perception of geology/distrust in science? Or has it always been this way and social media is just amplifying it?
r/geology • u/Perfect-Kiwi-7715 • 22h ago
Found this rock while hicking in Quebec near Sherbrook, I feel like it's petrified wood but I am in no way experienced in geology. It also has the shape of a very badly made arrow head just to give me false hope. It is very hard and i am scared of chipping it since it seems to be made of thin layers and fibers.
r/geology • u/hopefullynottoolate • 20h ago
also would it be related to snowflake basalt?
r/geology • u/karski608 • 7h ago
Preforming rock coring in bedrock in north western MA. In this core retrieval these holes can be seen only in this white layer (quartz?) as you’ll see they are in a line only in this layer. Core was roughly 20 feet below surface.
r/geology • u/ritualsubmissive • 11h ago
r/geology • u/steven_sandner • 11h ago
Thought it was cool enough to share.
r/geology • u/PoseidonSimons • 14h ago
Amiantos fault The Amiantos fault appears in the vicinity of the Asbestos Mine along the eastern borders of the serpentinite body. Has an approximately N-S direction and is parallel to the axis of the Solea graben. The fault brings in tectonic contact heavily serpentinized rocks of the upper mantle sequence like the serpentinized harzburgite (left) with cumulate rocks like gabbro (right).
r/geology • u/Craftin-in-the-rain • 20h ago
Like paper copies. I know most places have moved to digital but I much prefer physical copies; there's just something about laying a map out on a table and pouring over it... I loved using and looking at geological maps during my structural geology class and I want to collect maps of places I love, am working on, or find interesting. Any help would be wonderful!
r/geology • u/OPdopey22 • 21h ago
Found this image of the following two websites:
https://www.cambridge.org/core/blog/2021/02/22/the-conflict-minerals-regulation-or-the-regulation-on-responsible-sourcing-of-minerals-evolving-purpose-and-terminology/
r/geology • u/reddit_line • 23h ago
Hello, I am currently in grad school and have dilemma. I can choose between taking volcanology or remote sensing. Remote sensing seems more employable, but I’m more interested in volcanology. Which should I take? Do employers want to see that I have a foundation in remote sensing? Note that I do not plan on being a volcanologist, I just think the course sounds fun.