The Deform 2015 school is over, long live the Deform Community! Read what some of the digital geoscientists have been tweeting during the past week. They have take away messages for you even if you couldn’t make it!
Thanks to all the participants for a great week and thanks to @ruthamey, @tom_ingleby and @pervill for tweeting.
That's the end of #deform15! Many, many thanks to Y. Klinger, J.M Nocquet and all speakers for a great course! Now, fondue for dinner…?
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 13, 2015
Good hazard assessment: @USGS geologists+engineers ensured TransAlaskan pipeline built on rails, so it survived Mw7.9 Denali quake #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 13, 2015
Last lecture of #deform15! S. Baize discusses a geologists/geophysicists role in seismic hazard assessment.
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 13, 2015
Winter is coming back, we'll face some snow! #deform15 #deform2015 pic.twitter.com/EDmgXTWsYE
— Andreas R. (@andiwhere) February 13, 2015
Message from B. Shaw: If you haven't heard of Akaike information criterion (AIC) before, look it up when doing best fits to data #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 13, 2015
L. Fleitout: Viscoelastic relaxation: in the southeast part of south America we never measure the so called stable reference frame #deform15
— Geovill (@peruvill) February 12, 2015
Group shot for #deform15 field trip! Overview of Digne nappe, some rather large ammonites, lovely weather, great day! pic.twitter.com/nGPh4FZ5lT
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 12, 2015
S. Barbot: Slow-slip events are still a million times faster than plate motions. That's a lot! #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 12, 2015
Amonites during Fieldtrip #deform2015 pic.twitter.com/Uay3BdXzpq
— Geovill (@peruvill) February 11, 2015
Y. Klinger persuades us mapping surface ruptures is essential (it's worth going into the field and being cold, thirsty, tired…) #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 10, 2015
There was a small earthquake last night! A whole room full of people who study earthquakes, and no one was awake at 4am… #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 10, 2015
We got two earthquakes for the price of one from H. S. Bhat, in one supershear earthquake #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 9, 2015
Supershear earthquakes, Mach cones and earthquake families: seismology is cool! #deform2015
— Tom Ingleby (@tom_ingleby) February 9, 2015
Start of the post session! Come talk to me about slip inversions… #deform15 pic.twitter.com/4JIxZWYpMx
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 8, 2015
Going to get photogrammetry software to play with after M.P. Deseilligny's talk. Any recommendations? Visual SFM? Bundler PMVS? #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 8, 2015
"Humans were naked worms; yet they had an internal model of the world" – A. Tarantola #geodesy #deform2015
— Tom Ingleby (@tom_ingleby) February 8, 2015
8:30pm – time for the evening talks… #youcanneverhavetoomanyrocks #deform15 @ruthamey
— Tom Ingleby (@tom_ingleby) February 7, 2015
Advice for the future from J. Freymueller – Don't ever forget that GPS positions are fundamentally relative #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 7, 2015
Red wine, cheese and small cups of coffee for lunch – we must be in France! #deform2015 @ruthamey
— Tom Ingleby (@tom_ingleby) February 7, 2015
Introduction on Geodesy from J.M. Nocquet: we've gained an order of precision every decade. From measuring 1 cm/yr to ~0.1mm/yr #deform15
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 7, 2015
It's a beautiful day for science! First day of #deform15 course, in the lovely Barcelonette @tom_ingleby @yuzhou29 pic.twitter.com/lsp9w1mOdW
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 7, 2015
Early start – on our way to #deform15 #worthbeingupat4am @ruthamey pic.twitter.com/N805PDi9Bv
— Tom Ingleby (@tom_ingleby) February 6, 2015
Poster finished for #deform15! If anyone spots a mistake, kindly keep it to yourself… #MyFirstPhDPoster France, here we come! @tom_ingleby
— Ruth Amey (@ruthamey) February 5, 2015
No Comments
No comments yet.