All school news
Site news
-
Stanford Earth researchers discussed the global shift the carbon dioxide emissions trajectory, the Paris Agreement and future efforts to thwart emissions.
-
A workshop followed by a public conversation helped scientists find new ways to talk about their scientific research to audiences they do not often communicate with. Religion and spirituality can be agents for scientific learning.
-
Liu’s improvement of the Virtual Deep Seismic Sounding (VDSS) methodology overcomes problems that had misled earlier researchers and paves the way for understanding other seismically active areas.
-
Stanford Earth has launched its first online course to give working professionals access to best practices that drive sustainability. The school also will offer a 2.5-day on-campus program and certificate in September.
-
The Mining Seismic Wavefields (MSW) project, a research collaboration between Stanford, USC, Caltech, and Georgia Tech, has developed and demonstrated new methods for seismological data mining.
-
The E-IPER director was recognized for her work engaging people in sustainability and conservation.
-
Earth System Science PhD student Katerina Gonzales and colleagues found creative ways to discuss the warming of atmospheric rivers, or "sky long water things," for AGU's Up-Goer Five Challenge.
-
Energy Resources Engineering PhD candidate Usua Amanam discusses the experiences that led him to pursue research with professor Tony Kovscek.
-
Earth system science researchers Karen Casciotti and Colette Kelly discuss their paths to oceanography, the challenges they’ve faced and the changes they’ve seen in the field's culture and composition.
-
The cross-campus Big Earth Hackathon initiative is sponsored by the Stanford School of Engineering, School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences (Stanford Earth), and Stanford ICME. In addition to university support, the Hackathon was made possible by generous support from industry sponsor Tencent and a gift from David Wallerstein, chief exploration officer at Tencent.
-
Created in response to student interest and advocacy, the new Stanford Earth course highlights issues at the intersection of environmental science and social justice.
-
Robert Kabera founded alternative credit rating agency Credimarks with the objective of helping to extend credit into traditionally underserved markets and has helped over 50 energy companies in 9 countries provide cleantech to 6,000 people living off the electricity grid.
-
Stanford Earth's 2018 photo contest drew nearly 200 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.
-
An undergraduate's research adventure in Colorado was also a learning opportunity for her mentor.
-
Apoorv Bhargava, E-IPER MS-MBA '18, and Tim Latimer, E-IPER MS-MBA '17, have been recognized as innovators in the 2019 Forbes list, 30 Under 30 in Energy.
-
The 2018 Geophysical Journal International Student Author Award has been awarded to Karianne Bergen, PhD '18, for a paper co-authored with Greg Beroza detailing three new methods for detecting earthquakes.
-
Stanford Earth's Rosemary Knight is a panelist for a professional development conference for participants of the Diversifying Academia, Recruiting Excellence Doctoral Fellowship Program (DARE).
-
Elizabeth Miller has been awarded the 2018 Structural Geology & Tectonics Career Contribution Award from the Geological Society of America.
-
The co-directors of the Precourt Institute for Energy discuss why leaders from around the world are meeting to discuss the future of energy at Stanford’s Global Energy Forum.
-
Stanford Earth cryopsheric scientists offer a high-level introduction to ice and the role it plays in the Earth system.
-
Vilina Mehta writes in The Stanford Daily about her experience learning at the O’Donohue Family Stanford Educational Farm.