Oil: 'Demand Destruction Has Begun,' Say JPMorgan Analysts - 04 October, 2023 07:30 AM
UAE Holds Major Oil and Gas Conference Just Ahead of Hosting Climate Talks - 04 October, 2023 07:30 AM
Returned Asteroid Sample Canister Contains Way More Asteroid than Expected - 04 October, 2023 07:30 AM
India 'Will Manage' and Won’t Panic If Oil Rises Above $100, Says Energy Minister - 04 October, 2023 07:30 AM
Oil Headed Toward Low $70s Next Year, Says Citi - 03 October, 2023 07:30 AM
Hydraulic fracture monitoring using microseismic detection is a rising new star in the arena of reservoir characterization.
When I receive them I make every attempt to attend. As your president I will be invited to represent the Association at a wide variety of gatherings connected to the energy industry. Usually there are speaking opportunities or requirements.
AAPG's Distinguished Lecture program will have three speakers on tour in October, including some U.S. and Canadian talks by this year's AAPG-SEG speaker.
A team of geoscientists is unraveling some mysteries of the Gulf of Mexico using long offset seismic and marine gravity data to create a valuable 3-D model.
These are exciting times for the Division of Environmental Geosciences:
We wanted to know if an earth science course counts toward high school science graduation requirements
A visit to the Dallas Convention Center during the AAPG Annual Meeting last April was all that would have been needed for you to travel to the four corners of the world.
Two friends who have known each other since the first grade in Crandall, Texas, have become partners in a quest to bring geology to the public via television.
Brian Maxted, one of his generation's most successful oil finders, has looked around the world and says plenty of work remains for companies and professionals willing to take on the challenges of exploration.
The Middle East, like all areas that are touched by or depend on the oil industry, will continue to go through major changes, according to AAPG All-Convention Luncheon speaker Amy Myers Jaffe.
The Jackson School of Geosciences (JSG) at the University of Texas at Austin (UT) seeks a new Director for the Bureau of Economic Geology (Bureau), the oldest (1909) and second largest (~250 FTE) organized research unit at UT (https://www.beg.utexas.edu/ ). The role of the Director is multifaceted, serving as the chief executive of this dynamic geoscience research unit, which is also the State Geological Survey of Texas. The Director is the State Geologist of Texas.