News

Indonesia’s rumbling Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki erupted twice on Monday, sending a column of volcanic materials up to 18 ...
Devil’s Kettle Trail at Minnesota's Judge C.R. Magney State Park is the best hiking trail in the country, according to the 2025 USA TODAY 10BEST Readers’ Choice Awards. The two-mile round-trip ...
Students taking Geology 1001 stretched their legs and minds Tuesday as teaching assistants led them through rock structures that make up the University’s East Bank campus. Walter Library’s immense ...
A March-April 2025 report of the Geological Society of America estimates the state's Watersmeet gneiss to be more than 3.6 billion years old, beating Minnesota's Morton gneiss, now considered 3.5 ...
Other speakers included Tony Runkel, lead geologist for the Minnesota Geological Survey, who shared how nitrogen in deep springs may take several decades to reappear.
Feb. 20—A newly published study by researchers at the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA), the University of Minnesota's Minnesota Geological Survey, and the Minnesota Department of ...
Planet Earth Geology 'It's had 1.1 billion years to accumulate': Helium reservoir in Minnesota has 'mind-bogglingly large' concentrations News By Sascha Pare published 2 April 2024 ...
Researchers have discovered a large gas reservoir boasting extremely high concentrations of helium that could boost a dwindling global supply in Minnesota's Iron Range.
(CNN) — Authorities in Minnesota are investigating a landslide that killed a 19-year-old in a state park over the weekend. Law enforcement received a 911 call about a landslide at Minneopa State ...
Rock said come spring, 22 geology majors will take their upper level courses at Minnesota State University Moorhead through the tri-college system because NDSU no longer has that capacity.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency says that "porous geology makes the area uniquely susceptible to groundwater contamination produced by agricultural runoff, wastewater, and faulty septic ...
Geologist Mark Jirsa of the Minnesota Geological Survey went up the trail to scout new locations and, in a spot he had never visited before, stumbled across debris now linked to the Sudbury impact.