All school news
Site news
-
Tyler Kukla, Chayawan Jaikla, Indraneel Kasmalkar, and Anna Broome have been honored with 2019 OSPAs from the American Geophysical Union.
-
E-IPER PhD candidate Rachel Ragnhild Carlson writes about how she put skills she acquired as a U.S. government scientist to good use when she started graduate school.
-
“We do not just want work with women at the exclusion of others. We do want to promote outstanding work by outstanding women, and show women they are not alone in this field,” says ERE professor Margot Gerritsen.
-
A geophysics PhD alumna is the public face of earthquake science and monitoring in Mexico.
-
The assistant professor of Earth system science received a 2020 National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award to explore new ways of understanding how plants respond to the weather in order to improve models of carbon dioxide uptake, plant growth and soil decomposition.
-
Stanford University IT highlighted a project with geophysics professor Biondo Biondi to transform fiber optic cables buried under the university into seismic sensors for tracking and analyzing ground motions.
-
Stanford Earth hosted a conversation, #MeToo in the Geosciences, to continue the dialogue between faculty, staff and students around issues of sexual harassment, bullying, microaggressions, and their impacts in geoscience settings, in particular.
-
Ahmi Dhuna, a coterminal master's student in Sustainability Science and Practice (SUST), helped organize a satellite Democratic Party caucus so constituents can be counted in the voting process.
-
Stanford Earth's Noah Diffenbaugh is co-leading a new committee with the goal of finding ways for different disciplines to work together to accelerate solutions to environmental issues.
-
A committee is exploring ways of bridging sustainability efforts on campus and creating new mechanisms for addressing critical issues facing the planet
-
Stanford News featured several fieldwork photos from 2019 that included Stanford Earth students and researchers working around the world.
-
Naylor is a founding member of a new Land Use and Forest Protection Advisory Panel to advance the company's work to scale deforestation though supply chains and agricultural stakeholders.
-
Forsyth found that some spice processors in Bangladesh use an industrial lead chromate pigment to imbue turmeric with a bright yellow color.
-
Stanford Earth's 2019 photo contest drew 226 photographs from around the world from faculty, students, and staff. Photos captured the natural world, students at work in the field, and research in the lab.
-
Novy-Hildesley shared her wide-ranging journey, from Madagascar to the Peruvian Amazon, to find the simplicity on the other side of complexity.
-
With the goals of transforming learning on campus and beyond and accelerating discovery and the impact of research, initiatives arising out of the long-range vision are ramping up with activities to engage faculty and students.