December 2015
Review of applications begin
Review of applications from current Syracuse University graduate students will begin on Dec. 1. Click here for information about how to apply.
Find out more »January 2016
Review of applications for prospective students
Review of applications for prospective students begins on Jan. 15, 2016. More information about applying can be found here.
Find out more »Donald Rosenberry Visits Earth Sciences Department
Dr. Donald Rosenberry, Research Hydrologist at the USGS, will be visiting Syracuse University on Jan. 28. Details will be posted soon.
Find out more »February 2016
Emily Elliott Gives Seminar
Dr. Emily Elliott, Associate Professor in Geology and Planetary Science at University of Pittsburgh, will be a guest speaker in the “Water-Energy” Seminar. Details are forthcoming.
Find out more »March 2016
Carol Frost Visit
Dr. Carol Frost, NSF Division Director for the Division of Earth Sciences in the Directorate for Geosciences, will be a guest in the "Water-Energy" Seminar.
Find out more »September 2016
Fred Schroeder, “Careers in the Petroleum Industry”
Fred Schroeder, American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) Visiting Geoscientist, will speak on, “Careers in the Petroleum Industry.” Fred W. Schroeder is an independent consultant with over 35 years of industry experience. His experience includes 3D survey design, fault interpretation, and analyzing potential reservoirs, sources and seals. Additionally, Schroeder has designed, developed and delivered numerous in-house training classes from introductory to advanced levels. He has traveled extensively through the Visiting Geoscientist Program, offering traditional lectures and short courses. Fred Schroeder is one of the most…
Find out more »October 2016
Matthew Huber, “A Critique of Market-based Climate Policy”
Matthew Huber, Associate Professor of Geography, Syracuse University. Title: "A Critique of Market-based Climate Policy." Matt Huber will be discussing his book, "Lifeblood: Oil, Freedom, and the Forces of Capital," which was published in 2013 (University of Minnesota Press). This work, stemming from his dissertation research at Clark University, explores a deeper and more complex explanation for our 'oil addiction' that extends beyond the usual culprits. Huber is an associate professor in the geography department at Syracuse University and his teaching and…
Find out more »Research & Technology Forum: U.S. Power Plant Carbon Standards and the Potential for Clean Air, Human Health and Ecosystem Co-benefits
EMPOWER faculty member, Charles Driscoll, and Kathy Fallon Lambert, from the Science Policy Exchange at the Harvard Forest, will present the results of an ongoing project on co-benefits associated with policies to control carbon dioxide emissions from electric utilities by a boundary-spanning organization, the Science Policy Exchange. Carbon dioxide emissions standards for U.S. power plants will influence the fuels and technologies used to generate electricity, altering emissions of pollutants and affecting ambient air quality and public and ecosystem health. Three…
Find out more »Steven Holbrook, “Water, Weathering and Fractures: A Geophysical Perspective on Porosity in Earth’s Critical Zone”
Steven Holbrook, University of Wyoming. Title "Water, Weathering and Fractures: A Geophysical Perspective on Porosity in Earth’s Critical Zone” This lecture is part of the K. Douglas Nelson Lecture Series and is free and open to the public. A reception will follow.
Find out more »Breakfast with Dr. Steven Holbrook
Dr. Holbrook is a geophysicist who works with crustal-scale marine reflection and refraction seismic surveys. In addition to his marine geophysics research, he also has an interest in near-surface environmental geophysics as it pertains to watershed hydrology. Dr. Holbrook is a co-founder of the WyCehg (Wyoming Center for Environmental Hydrology and Geophysics). WyCEHG (pronounced "Y-Keg") was established in July 2012 by a $20 M grant from the National Science Foundation's EPSCoR program -- the largest research grant ever awarded to the University of Wyoming. …
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