AIPG
Discussion and dissemination of professional and scientific information.
The American Institute of Professional Geologists (AIPG), founded in 1963, is the largest association dedicated to promoting geology as a profession. It presently has more than 6,000 members in the U.S. and abroad, organized into 35 regional Sections. The Institute adheres to the principles of professional responsibility and public service and is the only international organization that certifies the competence and ethical conduct of geological scientists in all branches of the science with members employed in industry, government, and academia. AIPG emphasizes competence, integrity and ethics. AIPG is an advocate for the profession and communicates regularly to federal and state legislators and agencies on matters pertaining to the geosciences.
Геологи предлагают решения
Utah's Geological Hazards and Available Resources
Trouble in Paradise Geohazards in Florida
Sustainable Membership is Not Catch-and-Release: Setting Your Hook for Long-Term Engagement
Florida Water Law and the Central Florida Water Initiative
Carbon Capture and Storage
Why All the Fuss about Tipping Points and Doomsday Glaciers
Improve Engagement in Meetings Part 2
Improve Engagement in Meetings Part 1
Mapping an Aquifer with Airborne Geophysics
Geology, Resources, and a Little Ethnology of the Turpan, Basin, Xinjiang, China
Boston's History of Adaptive Reuse of Pits and Quarries
150 Years of the Zambian Copper Belt
The Role of a Geologist as a CP in Reporting Exploration Results and Mineral Resources
AIPG Student/ECP Webinar Series: Advancing your Geoscience Career
Lake Okeechobee Watershed Restoration Project ASR Well Program
The Cora Lake Shear Zone A Brittle Ductile Transition Laboratory
AIPG Student-ECP Webinar Series: Launching Your Geoscience Career
Perceived Risks in Mining
Messinian Salinity, Ionian Slab Roll back, and Mt Etna-How they Change Economies and Climates
State of Texas Advanced Resource Recovery STARR Program
Multiport Well Monitoring and Recharge Enhancement of the Edwards and Trinity Aquifers
Identifying Minerals With Hyperspectral Data Analysis-Part II
Identifying Minerals with Hyperspectral Analysis-Part 1
Dollars for Water: Quantifying Hydro Economic Constraints to Groundwater Recoverability
Integrating Digital and Traditional Field Methods into Geologic Mapping-An example from Central Texa