Main Page

From CSDMS
Revision as of 06:41, 30 September 2025 by WikiSysop (talk | contribs)


Explore Earth's surface with community software




For your summer viewing pleasure!!

Presentations and recordings are now available for CSDMS 2025 Annual Meeting keynotes, clinics and posters. Thank you all for participating in this annual event that was hold at Colorado University. More...

Nominate a science announcement
Follow us at @csdms.bsky.social

AvatarCSDMS @csdms.bsky.social

Earth Surface Processes Institute - Deadline for application January 24th!! ESPIn is a five-day immersive training experience organized by CSDMS for 25 early career scientists, including graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, researchers, and faculty. Details: csdms.colorado.edu/wiki/ESPIn
Posted on: 2026-01-16

AvatarCSDMS @csdms.bsky.social

CSDMS Student Modeler Award Competition is now open! Deadline to send your materials is 1/26/26. More info and how to apply here: csdms.colorado.edu/wiki/Student...
Posted on: 2026-01-14

AvatarCSDMS @csdms.bsky.social

Register here: cuboulder.zoom.us/meeting/regi...
Posted on: 2026-01-07

AvatarCSDMS @csdms.bsky.social

New York University - postdoctoral position on large-scale flood modeling. See also: csdms.colorado.edu/wiki/Jobs
Posted on: 2026-01-14

AvatarCSDMS @csdms.bsky.social

Postdoc position at the University of Tennessee. See also csdms.colorado.edu/wiki/Jobs
Posted on: 2026-01-14


Between the Bytes; Greg Tucker's blog

The Wizard of Seneca Falls: I’m enchanted by waterfalls, and not just for the obvious reasons. To a geologist, a waterfall is a slow-motion wave in solid rock. Occasionally you find waterfalls that are stationary, pinned in place by some hard piece of geology: an ancient dike of frozen lava, say, or a vertical wall of tough quartzite inside a sandwich of mud. Most of the time, though, waterfalls .....