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I wrote in my previous toot that I'm not a . If more skilled researchers can interpret, or use the section of our just cut down tree that was dying because of dark beetle, here are some good photos. Don't hesitate to comment.

It's from our garden very close to , just south of Paris in France. (ruler in cm)

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As said yesterday, we had to cut down our 40 years old dying tree. It was severely attacked by bark beetle (you can see the holes on the edge of whole trunk section, and the larvae on other photos), likely after being stressed and weakened by and in the past years. A probable effect of , .

It's from our garden very close to , 60km south of Paris, France.

I'm not a so I cannot interpret in detail the trunk section. But I will post hr photos in next toot for those more skilled.

Task of the day: splitting wood 👇🏼

We had to cut down our 40 years old dying spruce tree 🌲. Will say more about it in forthcoming toots.

New paper published: A contribution to the quantification of crustal shortening and kinematics of deformation across the Western ( ∼ 20–22° S), Habel et al., Solid Earth, 2023

se.copernicus.org/articles/14/ (open access)

I just revived my blog, which was a little sleepy for a while, with a new post about the first ever described surface rupture (that of the 1891 Nobi Mw~7.5 earthquake in central Japan). 1/n

The 1891 fault rupture was indeed perfectly described and interpreted by Bunjiro Kotô in a 1893 article. It is admirably imaged by a B&W photograph in Kotô's article, and by this delicate anonymous watercolour painting 👇🏼, perhaps the first artist view of an active tectonic fault.

Read more: tectoldies.mystrikingly.com/bl

My Tectoldies blog is about “the beauty of tectonics – the art of geological sections & other tectonic sketches.” Feel free to explore and comment previous posts. I'll toot about some of them soon.

WHAT ? French president, Emmanuel Macron, literally writes:

Who could have predicted the climate crisis…?

Who 🤔 ?
➡️ Thousands of scientists
➡️ 6 IPCC reports
➡️ 27 COP
➡️ even EXXON researchers tens of years ago
etc…

Here, near 60km south of Paris, yesterday's was higher than 16°C.

For the last day of 2022, tens of T° records broken in western Europe.

To remember that we are in “𝓌𝒾𝓃𝓉𝑒𝓇” I asked Midjourney to generate something with the prompt “𝓃𝑒𝓌 𝓎𝑒𝒶𝓇 𝑒𝓋𝑒 𝒾𝓃 𝐹𝑜𝓃𝓉𝒶𝒾𝓃𝑒𝒷𝓁𝑒𝒶𝓊 𝒻𝑜𝓇𝑒𝓈𝓉” 👇🏼

Found a beautiful in the (South of France) few days ago. Probably not exactly the famous laboratory but close to.

I post here this awesome map from Serge Zaka 👇🏼

2022 has been the warmest year on record (since start of the measurements) for most of European countries.

Unfortunately, Serge Zaka is apparently not on Fediverse but he maintains an excellent twitter feed on in , : twitter.com/SergeZaka (sorry for posting a link to the bird site)

USGS got very similar mechanism, but puts hypocenter deeper (around 20km). This perhaps means that the rupture happened in the Gorda tectonic plate beneath the upper N American plate. The small Gorda plate is plunging under N America along the zone.

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Magnitude Mw6.4 in the region of the triple junction, at northern end of the San Andreas fault, . Mechanism is strike slip; rupture may have occurred on any of the ~N-S or ~E-W fault plane as it's a tectonically complicated area.

Mechanism Geoscope IPGP: geoscope.ipgp.fr/index.php/en/

Time ago, the now scary bird site, was useful for science, knowledge building, hazard communication, etc...

We wrote a paper on that: Rapid collaborative knowledge building via Twitter after significant geohazard events.

gc.copernicus.org/articles/3/1

The government of posted this on the scary bird site:

of the press must not be switched on and off at will. As of today, the below can no longer follow, comment or criticize us. We have a problem with that twitter.

Le Monde: Twitter suspend des comptes de journalistes : l’Union européenne menace le réseau social de « sanctions »

Twitter suspends journalist accounts: EU threatens social network with 'sanctions'

Just posted this 👇🏼 on the scary bird site.
Will see what happens.

Peer review, a huge waste of time, and therefore money ?

Figure 👇🏼 and excerpts taken from Aczel et al. 2021 doi.org/10.1186/s41073-021-001

“…the total time reviewers globally worked on peer reviews was over 100 million hours in 2020, equivalent to over 15 thousand years. The estimated monetary value of the time US-based reviewers spent on reviews was over 1.5 billion USD in 2020 […] The numbers highlight the enormous amount of work and time that researchers provide to the publication system.”

(authors add: By design, our results are very likely to be under-estimates as they reflect only a portion of the total number of journals worldwide.)

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