NEW VEHICLE
The Geological Society is launching a new vehicle to promote and develop all aspects of environmental geoscience, with the aim of putting environmental issues centre-stage and to allow geoscientists to claim their rightful place as environmental spokespeople within the scientific community. The President and Council have asked us to lead this initiative.
The Society operates largely through its specialist and regional groups. Attempts to establish an Environmental Geoscience Group have, however, met with scant success. Environmental themes also cross many boundaries between specialisms, and Fellows who are, say, hydrogeologists or volcanologists, may not want to ‘abandon’ that affiliation and join some new ‘environment’ grouping. So instead, we have developed the idea of a ‘network’ – a “horizontal” structure to link the “vertical” structures that are our existing groups, like walkways between tower blocks.
COUNCIL BLESSING
The idea has received Council’s blessing, and this article, along with new material on the Society’s website (www.geolsoc.org.uk/environmentnetwork) its first announcement. The Network will contribute to the conference on Water Futures (organised by the Hydrogeology Group) and will launch a bid to organise the second of a new series of annual ‘Frontiers’ meetings - a new type of conference aimed at young researchers (planned for November 2012). Discussions are also underway to organise meetings in collaboration with other learned societies.
If you share our desire to see geosciences centre-stage in the 21st Century, please let us have your ideas for future meetings, events, publications, e-media activities. We also plan to set up a blog to encourage active online debate.
Remember, as geologists our understanding of Earth history and processes affords us perspectives on the environment very different from those of our fellow scientists, so they need your help too!
Visit the
Environment Network page.
- [email protected], Merit Researcher, Natural History Museum and former Member of Council.
- [email protected], Professor of Mineralogy, Manchester University.