Laura A. Guertin
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Lorraine Lisiecki
Lorraine E. Lisiecki Department of Earth Science [email protected] University of California, Santa Barbara http://lorraine-lisiecki.com Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9630 805-893-4437 Education Ph.D., 2005, Geological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI Thesis title: “Paleoclimate time series: New alignment and compositing techniques, a 5.3-Myr benthic 18O stack, and analysis of Pliocene-Pleistocene climate transitions” Advisor: Prof. Timothy Herbert Sc.M., 2003, Geological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI Sc.M., 2000, Geosystems, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA S.B., 1999, Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA Professional and Academic Appointments Associate Professor, Department of Earth Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, July 2012 – Present Assistant Professor, Department of Earth Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, July 2008 – 2012 Research Fellow, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, Sept. 2007 – Aug. 2008 Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Earth Sciences, Boston University, Sept. 2005 – Aug. 2007 NOAA Climate and Global Change Fellowship, Advisor: Prof. Maureen Raymo Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Geological Sciences, Brown University, 2000 – 2005 Master’s Candidate, Dept. of Earth, Atmosphere, and Planetary Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1999 – 2000 Research Assistant, Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc., Cambridge, MA, 1999 Research Interests I believe we cannot confidently -
Timing of Late Cenozoic Volcanic and Tectonic Events Along the Western Margin of the North American Plate
Timing of late Cenozoic volcanic and tectonic events along the western margin of the North American plate WARREN BARRASH Geoscience Research Consultants; and Department of Geology, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83843 RAMESH VENKATAK.RISHNAN* Geophotography and Remote Sensing Center, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83843 ABSTRACT TECTONIC SETTING PRIOR TO 16 + 1 M.Y. B.P. A number of well- to relatively well-dated significant volcanic Subduction of the Farallon plate dominated the volcanic and and tectonic events along the western margin of the North Ameri- tectonic setting of western North America during early to middle can plate began, ended, or increased intensity at 16 ± I m.y. B.P., Tertiary time. Subduction-related volcanism migrated over much of 10 ± 2 m.y. B.P., and 5 ± 1 m.y. B.P. Continental events at 16 ± 1 the western United States, including areas as far inland as western m.y. B.P. were related to the upwelling of an elongated mantle Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado. A shallow dip to the subduct- diapir, which created a widespread thermal disturbance east of the ing plate appears to be required by the far inland position of arc subducting Farallon plate. Oceanic events at 16 ± 1 m.y. B.P. were volcanism (Lipman and others, 1972; Coney and Reynolds, 1977). largely related to the approach of the East Pacific Rise toward the Contact of the East Pacific Rise with the North American plate North American plate. Continental and oceanic events at 10 ±2 margin at about 30 m.y. B.P. initiated a northward and southward m.y. -
Mary Anning: Princess of Palaeontology and Geological Lioness
The Compass: Earth Science Journal of Sigma Gamma Epsilon Volume 84 Issue 1 Article 8 1-6-2012 Mary Anning: Princess of Palaeontology and Geological Lioness Larry E. Davis College of St. Benedict / St. John's University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.csbsju.edu/compass Part of the Paleontology Commons Recommended Citation Davis, Larry E. (2012) "Mary Anning: Princess of Palaeontology and Geological Lioness," The Compass: Earth Science Journal of Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Vol. 84: Iss. 1, Article 8. Available at: https://digitalcommons.csbsju.edu/compass/vol84/iss1/8 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@CSB/SJU. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Compass: Earth Science Journal of Sigma Gamma Epsilon by an authorized editor of DigitalCommons@CSB/SJU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Figure. 1. Portrait of Mary Anning, in oils, probably painted by William Gray in February, 1842, for exhibition at the Royal Academy, but rejected. The portrait includes the fossil cliffs of Lyme Bay in the background. Mary is pointing at an ammonite, with her companion Tray dutifully curled beside the ammonite protecting the find. The portrait eventually became the property of Joseph, Mary‟s brother, and in 1935, was presented to the Geology Department, British Museum, by Mary‟s great-great niece Annette Anning (1876-1938). The portrait is now in the Earth Sciences Library, British Museum of Natural History. A similar portrait in pastels by B.J.M. Donne, hangs in the entry hall of the Geological Society of London. -
The Dickin-Stone-Ian Artic and Alpine Climate Change Experience (AACCRE) Trips 2016-2018 by Ben Edwards
Earth Sciences Newsletter 2018 The Dickin-stone-ian Artic and Alpine Climate Change Experience (AACCRE) Trips 2016-2018 by Ben Edwards Thanks to continued very generous support from John and Susan Pohl, we are growing our Arctic and Alpine Climate Change Experience program. In Summer 2016, a group of 6 Dickinsonians (Billy Dougherty ’18, Ivy Gil- bert’18, Karuna Sah’19, John and Susan Pohl, Ben Edwards) expeditioned to Pond Inlet, at the northern edge of Baffin Island, and trekked out onto the frozen waters of Eclipse Sound to camp on still frozen sea ice for a week. The flight up became a short course on glaciers as we flew over vast expanses of retreating ice on the northeastern mountains of Baffin Island. Once we got our gear packed in qamutiiks (wooden sleds about 10 feet long), we were hauled about 4 hours down the ice to the eastern edge of Eclipse Sound, where it enters northwestern Baffin Bay. While camped on the sea ice we explored the ice floe edge where we saw and heard narwhals and seals, lots of birds, and even a polar bear (we had an Inuit guide with bear protection 24/7!). To learn more about the structure of the spring sea ice, we augered holes in several locations and found ice as thick as 1.4 m (this was comforting!) and as thin as 40 cm (somewhat less comforting…). We also recorded pH and conductivity measurements of water within the sea ice, and found that it had components from surface melting (relatively ‘fresh’ water, lower pH and EC) as well as sea water within the ice layers. -
EVENT LOCATION | ROOM TIME FRIDAY, 30 OCTOBER Association
EVENT LOCATION | ROOM TIME BCC-Baltimore Convention Center; Hilton-Hilton Baltimore FRIDAY, 30 OCTOBER Association for Women Geoscientists (AWG) Foundation Board of Directors Meeting Hilton, Calloway A 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. GSA Audit Committee Meeting Hilton, Poe A noon-4 p.m. Mineralogical Society of America (MSA) Executive Committee Meeting **By Invitation Only** Hilton, Calloway B 3-7 p.m. SATURDAY, 31 OCTOBER Mineralogical Society of America (MSA) Council Breakfast **By Invitation Only** Hilton, Peale C Room 7-8 a.m. GSA Science Communications Workshop: Be Heard & Be Interesting BCC, Room 312 8 a.m.-noon GSA Council Meeting - Day 1 Hilton, Holiday Ballroom 4 8 a.m.-noon Mineralogical Society of America (MSA) Council Meeting Hilton, Peale B Room 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM) Council Meeting BCC, Room 303 8 a.m.-5 p.m. GSA Foundation Board of Trustees Meeting Hilton, Holiday Ballroom 5 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. AASP-The Palynological Society Short Course: Applied Biostratigraphy in Petroleum Exploration and Production BCC, Room 313 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Paleontological Society (PS) Short Course – Earth-Life Transitions BCC, Room 310 9 a.m.-5 p.m. American Geosciences Institute (AGI) GeoRef Advisory Committee Meeting Hilton, Mencken 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Association for Women Geoscientists (AWG) Foundation Board of Directors Meeting Hilton, Calloway A 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Association for Women Geoscientists (AWG) Fall Board Meeting Hilton, Armistead 9 a.m.-6 p.m. GSA Science Editor Summit Hilton, Poe 10 a.m.-noon GSA Geology and Public Policy Committee Meeting Hilton, Latrobe Room 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m. -
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Newsletter 2017-18 Department of GEOSCIENCES From the Department Head Hi alums: I hope this newsletter finds you in good health and spirits. It’s been a very exciting and productive year in the department. In case the news hasn’t reached you, Lee Kump was recently named the seventeenth dean of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences. We are incredibly proud of Lee for this major honor and we know that the college will benefit greatly under his dedicated and sage leadership. Lee’s vision and energy has left the department a much better place. I’m sure all of the faculty will join me in thanking him for a job very well done. I’ve just re-stepped into the headship for a year as we conduct a national search for a new leader. Lee plans to keep an active research program, but it’s still a bittersweet time for many of us with the retirements of Mike Arthur and Terry Engelder, although we expect both of them to be in the department regularly. You can read more about Mike’s and Terry’s incredible careers in this issue, but needless to say we are going to miss these inspirational scientists. Mike “Black Shale” Arthur wrote the textbook on how ancient organic-rich rocks accumulated, and christened the field of chemostratigraphy. Terry “Marcellus” Engelder had one of the most productive late careers on record with his discovery of fracturing patterns in the Marcellus Shale that helped pave the way for gas production in our state. It’s been fun to watch the career paths of these two very different scientists converge in recent years. -
Dirty Snow: the Impact of Urban Particulates on a Mid-Latitude Seasonal Snowpack
Syracuse University SURFACE Theses - ALL June 2018 Dirty snow: The impact of urban particulates on a mid-latitude seasonal snowpack David James Kelley Syracuse University Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/thesis Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Kelley, David James, "Dirty snow: The impact of urban particulates on a mid-latitude seasonal snowpack" (2018). Theses - ALL. 242. https://surface.syr.edu/thesis/242 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses - ALL by an authorized administrator of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstract This thesis examines the spatial distribution of particulate matter in snow around a mid- size, midlatitude city. Particulates are small, light absorbing impurities that are produced from the incomplete combustion of carbon-based fuel. When deposited on the snowpack, these particles reduce snow albedo and accelerate melt. Two experiments were designed to explore the distribution and effect of urban particulate emissions on snow surrounding Syracuse, NY (43.049897, -76.149102, pop: 149,000). The “directional study” examined the relationship between distribution and cross-city prevailing wind, while, the “transect study” examined the variability of particulate concentration with distance from a busy interstate highway. Fifteen sites were sampled over two winter seasons (2016-2017 and 2017-2018). Eight sites were located in the suburbs roughly aligned to the cardinal directions with respect to the city, one site was located within the city boundaries and six sites were located on a transect across I-90. -
Michael Charles Rygel Curriculum Vitae
MICHAEL CHARLES RYGEL CURRICULUM VITAE CONTACT INFORMATION Michael C. Rygel, Ph.D., P.G. Department of Geology State University of New York, College at Potsdam 44 Pierrepont Ave. Potsdam, New York, 13676 cell: (315) 212-0963, office: (315) 267-3401, fax: (315) 267-2695 email: [email protected] web page: http://www2.potsdam.edu/rygelmc/Rygel.homepage.htm EDUCATION & CREDENTIALS • Professional Geologist New York License # 000232-1, awarded August 2017 • Doctor of Philosophy (Earth Science) Dalhousie University, 2005 Dissertation: Alluvial sedimentology and basin analysis of Carboniferous strata near Joggins, Nova Scotia, Atlantic Canada • Bachelor of Science (Geology and Planetary Science) University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown, 2000 EXPERTISE • Geoscience education • Basin analysis • Facies analysis of shallow marine and terrestrial • Ichnology strata • Geologic mapping • Fluvial sedimentology and reservoir architecture • Geographic information systems • • Sequence stratigraphy Seismic interpretation PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE • Associate Professor State University of New York, College at Potsdam Department of Geology, September 1, 2012 – present Assistant Professor, September 1, 2006 – August 2012 Department Chair, July 2014 - present • Summer Faculty Member Indiana University Indiana University Geologic Field Station, June 2011 – present Michael Rygel, CV 2 • Consultant Devon Energy Geoscience Technology, Strategic Services Division, June 2011 – November 2013 • Post-Doctoral Research Associate University of Nebraska-Lincoln Department -
Synoptic View of Lithospheric S-Wave Velocity Structure in the Southern United States: a Comparison of 3D Seismic Tomographic Models 2020 CALENDAR
Member Appreciation Issue VOL. 29, NO. 7 | J U LY 2019 Synoptic View of Lithospheric S-Wave Velocity Structure in the Southern United States: A Comparison of 3D Seismic Tomographic Models 2020 CALENDAR BUY ONLINE } rock.geosociety.org/store | from the 2020 Postcards Field toll-freeBUY 1.888.443.4472 ONLINE | +1.303.357.1000, } rock.geosociety.org/store option 3 | [email protected] JULY 2019 | VOLUME 29, NUMBER 7 SCIENCE 4 Synoptic View of Lithospheric S-Wave Velocity Structure in the Southern United States: GSA TODAY (ISSN 1052-5173 USPS 0456-530) prints news A Comparison of 3D Seismic Tomographic Models and information for more than 22,000 GSA member readers Alden Netto et al. and subscribing libraries, with 11 monthly issues (March- April is a combined issue). GSA TODAY is published by The Cover: Map view of four recent seismic shear wave models of the southern U.S. at 5 km above the Geological Society of America® Inc. (GSA) with offices at 3300 Penrose Place, Boulder, Colorado, USA, and a mail- Moho, plotted as perturbations with respect to the same average 1D model. Solid black lines represent ing address of P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301-9140, USA. a proposed rift and transform fault system. The southern U.S. has relatively low seismicity compared GSA provides this and other forums for the presentation to western and northeastern North America, so few local earthquakes are available for imaging, and of diverse opinions and positions by scientists worldwide, there have historically been few seismic stations to record distant earthquakes as well. -
Women in Glaciology, a Historical Perspective
944 Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 56, No. 200, 2010 Women in glaciology, a historical perspective Christina L. HULBE,1 Weili WANG,2 Simon OMMANNEY3 1Department of Geology, Portland State University, PO Box 751, Portland, Oregon 97207-0751, USA E-mail: [email protected] 2NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Code 614.1, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771, USA 3Emeritus Associate, Scott Polar Research Institute ABSTRACT. Women’s history in glaciology extends as far back in time as the discipline itself, although their contributions to the scientific discourse have for all of that history been constrained by the socio- political contexts of the times. The first Journal of Glaciology paper authored by a woman appeared in 1948, within a year of the founding of the Journal, but it was not until the 1980s that women produced more than a few percent of Journal and Annals of Glaciology papers. Here international perspectives on women’s participation in the sciences are presented in order to establish an economic and socio- political context for stories of women ‘pioneers’ in glaciology and a frame in which to discuss women’s persistent under-representation relative to men. We find that the experiences of individual glaciologists mirror women’s experiences in higher education and the sciences as a whole. The existence of both positive and negative trends in women’s participation in the sciences suggests caution in the interpretation of recent positive trends for women’s participation in glaciology. 1. HISTORICAL CONTEXT women’s participation both waxes and wanes due to 1.1. Histories of women in science identifiable economic and social forcings. -
WOMEN in GEOSCIENCE Elizabeth Pickett Depicts a Geoscientist Building on Foundations Laid Down by a Predecessor
SCIENTISTVOLUME 29 No. 04 ◆ MAY 2019 ◆ WWW.GEOLSOC.ORG.UK/GEOSCIENTIST GEOThe Fellowship Magazine of the Geological Society of London @geoscientistmag WOMEN IN GEOSCIENCE Elizabeth Pickett depicts a geoscientist building on foundations laid down by a predecessor MINE HEAT OUTNUMBERED GIRLS INTO GEOSCIENCE The potential in Malin Kylander on the hurdles still Jodie Fischer & Sarah Boulton abandoned coalmines faced by women in science on the growth of this scheme WWW.GEOLSOC.ORG.UK/GEOSCIENTIST | MAY 2019 | 1 Lyell poster 2019 v1_ART 14-9-18_Lyell leaflet 16/09/2018 18:45 Page 1 Lyell Meeting 2019 Carbon: geochemical and palaeobiological perspectives 28 June 2019 The Geological Society, Burlington House The fundamental building block of life as we know it, carbon, is critical to the Earth system. Traditionally biological and chemical approaches to understanding carbon dynamics in the geological past have been AD SPACEconsidered in relative isolation. For the 2019 Lyell Meeting we will to bring together a broad spectrum of scientists that address the big picture of carbon in the Earth system, drawing on expertise in Convenors: palaeontology, geochemistry, palaeobotany, atmospheric Barry Lomax (Nottingham University) processes, deep-Earth processes, and anthropogenic WT Fraser (Oxford Brookes University) impacts. Further information: For further information about the conference This meeting seeks to foster conversation between please contact: Katherina Steinmetz, Conference Office, The these disparate communities to facilitate a more holistic Geological Society, Burlington House, approach to considering carbon, and how it cycles Piccadilly, London W1J 0BG T: 0207 434 9944 between Earth’s organic and inorganic reservoirs. E: [email protected] Web: www.geolsoc.org.uk/lyell19 Call for Abstracts Follow this event on Twitter #lyell19 We invite oral and poster abstract submissions for the meeting, and these should be sent in a Word document to [email protected] by 30 April 2019. -
The Gangdese Retroarc Thrust Belt Revealed
VOL. 17, No. 7 A PUBLICATION OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA JULY 2007 The Gangdese retroarc thrust belt revealed 2007 Medal and Award Recipients, p. 12 2007 GSA Fellows Elected, p. 13 2007 GSA Research Grant Recipients, p. 19 Groundwork: The coupling between devaluation of writing in scientific authorship and inflation of citation indices, p. 44 It’s Not Just Software . It’s RockWare. For Over 23 Years. RockWorks™ RockWorks Utilities™ 3D Subsurface Data An indispensable collection of Management, Analysis, and mapping, modeling, analysis and Visualization display tools. RockWorks Utilities, a component of RockWorks 2006, is All-in-one tool that allows you now available as a stand-alone to visualize, interpret and program, providing essential tools present your surface and not found in any other single sub-surface data. Now with program, including point maps, Access Database for powerful gridding tools, contour maps and 3D queries, graphic editing tools, surfaces, solid modeling, volumetrics, dozens of data and graphic hydrology/hydrochemistry, structural imports and exports. and directional tools, statistical tools, Free trial available at www.rockware.com. and much more. Free trial available at www.rockware.com. $1,999 Commercial/$749 Academic Introductory price of only $495 DeltaGraph™ AqQA™ The Most Comprehensive Spreadsheet for Water Analysis Charting Application Available • Create Piper diagram, Stiff Analyze, visualize and customize diagram, Ternary, and eight other your numbers effi ciently with high plot types quality output. Analyze your data • Instant unit conversion — shift with the Formula Builder and 50 effortlessly among units mathematical and statistical • Check water analyses for functions or fi t a curve to your internal consistency data with advanced regression • Manage water data in a tools.