Introduce yourself 👋🏾

Hi all, my name is Hector and I am a researcher at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. I used GMT 4 some years ago but for different reasons I left it a little bit aside; however, now I am returning to use it and adapt some of my old scripts to GMT 6.

Hi all! I’m Gareth, a geophysics professor at the University of California, Riverside. I’ve been using GMT for (ahem) 22 years, since version 3(!) I have mostly conquered the changes made in version 5, and am now trying to figure out PyGMT!

1 Like

Hello everyone.
Greeting with Newy year and Christmas.
My name is Vladimir Zhuravlev, I am from Russia.
PHD in math and physics, lead scince researcher
of Institute of Earth physics.
I am also db progrmmer , former MVP 2006-2017
www.foxclub.ru domain owner.
I am very young in GMT, let say, just very stupid.

Hi all, I’m a geologist/seismologist/geophysicist and am excited to finally (new job) have time to upgrade my old GMT4/5 scripts and take advantage of GMT6 and PyGMT.
Cheers!

3 Likes

Hi everyone! Finally a part of the GMT forum!
I hope you are all staying safe!
Kind regards!

2 Likes

Hello everyone, I am Sirel Colon. Researcher in seismic hazard, learning to tsunamis model at GET - Toulouse University. I’m starting at GMT right now.

2 Likes

Bienvenue :slight_smile:

Oui, bienvenue. Et qu’est-ce que tu vas utiliser come programme(s) de modélisation des tsunamis?

Merci! :slightly_smiling_face:

Merci! Pour l’instant on vas utiliser le TUNAMI-N2 (linear theory in deep sea, shallow-water theory in shallow sea and runup on land with constant grids)

OK,
Mirone has nice tools for modeling and visualization as well.

http://www.joa-quim.pt/mirone/howtos/A_simple_tsunami_propagation_example.pdf
http://www.joa-quim.pt/mirone/howtos/A_nested_grids_approach.pdf

hi, i am phd student of geophysics

1 Like

Hi!

My name is Katinka and I’m a PhD student in seismology at ETH Zürich. A fellow seismologist friend taught me how to use Pygmt, and I’m very happy with how amazing my maps look now!

Cheers!

1 Like

Hi here!

My name is Anuar, and I am a first-year PhD student at the UGA in France. I just want to take this opportunity to thank all developers for their hard work. I have been using GMT for a couple of months now, and I cannot imagine how I would finish all my conference materials without GMT. Very intuitive language, detailed tutorial, more than plotting tool, extremely responsive community! Keep up the good work!

Cheers,
Anuar

2 Likes

Hello, my name is Guillaume, I am a student at the University of Lubumbashi in the DRC. I started to study gmt this year in university and want to deepen. I feel comfortable when I had to browse your services, I think I made a good choice to join this forum

1 Like

Hi everyone,

My name is Sorin Nistor and I’m a geodesist from University of Oradea, Romania.

1 Like

Hi! I’m Artie Rodgers, a seismologist. I’ve been using GMT since my graduate student days in the early 1990’s. I’ve been starting to use PyGMT for various task including plotting seismic tomography models. I’ve found documentation, gallery examples and this online forum to be helpful. Thanks to all the very smart and hardworking people in this community!

3 Likes

Hi,

I’m Leon and I’m in my first year of a geophysics PhD. I’m using GMT to present seismology results. I used Python + cartopy in the past but now I’m learning Julia, so I was very happy when I found Joaquim’s GMT.jl package. I think GMT is a heroic effort and the amount of features is amazing.

2 Likes

Hi!. My name is Sebastian. I’m student of Udec, Chile. I work in my undergraduate thesis in Ocean modelingl (CROCO) and drift particles modeling (OpenDrift) aplicate to a north bay of Chile. I need apply GMT to my work. I would like to learn GMT, I think is a amazing tool. I hope to contribute too!

1 Like

Hi everyone! My name is Luca and I’m an italian geology student. I am new to GMT world!

1 Like