BGS has been working with partners to make the geosciences more accessible to young people, including those from under-represented backgrounds.
Meet the team behind our geohazard products and datasets.
PhD student Hamish Duncalf-Youngson recently visited Manipur, India, to assess the effects of aquaculture, environmental change and pollution at this internationally important site.
Michael Watts, BGS Head of Inorganic Chemistry, and previous placement students reflect on their experiences working at BGS’s Inorganic Geochemistry Facility over the past 20 years.
Measuring, recording and interpreting variations in the Earth’s magnetic field including those caused by space weather
Tsunamis are truly multi-hazardous global phenomena because the different mechanisms result in their wide geographic spread and impact.
The UK’s 14 Overseas Territories (UKOTs) are highly diverse islands, geographically dispersed around the world in different climate zones. Most are small islands that are particularly vulnerable to natural hazards and climate change.
BGS and Chile’s Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería have signed a bilateral scientific partnership to support research into critical raw materials and sustainable practices.
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