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Stanford Earth's website has been recognized with the "Leader of the Pack in Higher Education" award from Acquia Engage for its integration, performance, and user experience.
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In GEOPHYS 190: Near-Surface Geophysics, Rosemary Knight and Dustin Schroeder help students apply geophysical imaging methods and tools to sustainable water management in California’s Central Valley.
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E-IPER student Valerie Shen, who is pursuing a joint MBA/MS in Environment and Resources, has been named a 2019 Siebel Scholar for her outstanding academic achievement and leadership.
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Geological Sciences professor Jon Payne discusses a range of life experiences, from hobbies and home life to the trials and successes of his research.
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A new Stanford program, supported by Bank of America, will fund research to develop the finance and policy tools needed for the transition to a decarbonized and climate-resilient global economy.
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During the summer of 2018, eight students traveled to South Africa with the Stanford Alpine Project (SAP), an organization that gives Stanford students a chance to design and implement a student-led field excursion that is accessible to all Earth scientists. The group encourages cross-disciplinary interchange and collaboration at all academic levels.
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Paula Welander has been honored by the GSA for her research accomplishments and presented a 2018 National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award for her proposal to research biomarker lipids that give insight into Earth’s history.
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E-IPER students have produced a film that highlights ways that indigenous knowledge and western science can work together to manage resources.
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Three E-IPER alumni share what led them to take a chance on a less conventional job change.
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Samanthe Tiver Belanger, E-IPER '18, discusses her pursuit of an MS in Environment & Resources from the Stanford Earth and an MBA from the Graduate School of Business.
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Dustin Schroeder, an assistant professor of geophysics, challenges first-year students to dissect “big science” with the introductory seminar The Space Mission to Europa.
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Energy Resources Engineering PhD student Usua Amanam has been recognized as a 2019 Siebel Scholar. The foundation awards grants to graduate students for their outstanding academic achievement and demonstrated leadership.
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Miyuki Hino and Philip Womble, PhD students in the Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources (E-IPER), have been recognized for their contributions and commitment to improving the environment.
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Samantha Tellatin, the recipient of a 2018-19 Stanford USA MBA Fellowship, will pursue an MBA degree jointly with an MS in the Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources (E-IPER). Fellows were selected for their commitment to supporting development and revitalization in the Midwest.
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The O'Donohue Family Stanford Educational Farm is featured among the university's gardens that are open to people who live, work and study at Stanford, those who live nearby, and others who visit campus from across the country and the world.
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Geology alumna Gerta Keller, '78 is featured in an article in The Atlantic exploring her controversial hypothesis about the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs about 66 million years ago, a theory amidst the “dinosaur wars.”
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AGU Fellows are honored for visionary leadership and scientific excellence that fundamentally advances research. Klemperer, a geophysics professor, studies the growth, tectonic evolution, and deformation of the Earth's crust and upper mantle using active and passive seismology.
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San Lorenzo High School teacher Ian Hagmann, MS '15 has been awarded a five-year fellowship that includes stipends, funds for professional development, grants for teaching materials and opportunities for leadership development.
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Dustin Schroeder, an assistant professor of geophysics, has been granted a 2018 National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award for his proposal to synthesize radar measurements of glaciers since the 1960s.
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Jackson co-authored a paper showing how fracking wastewater may threaten West Virginia's surface water that was judged to be the best for the year in mineralogy of coal or hydrocarbon source rocks.
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Stanford Earth researchers Eric Lambin, Dustin Schroeder, Alexandra Konings, Jamie Jones, Steven Gorelick, Kate Maher, and Jenny Suckale receive new grants from the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment supporting innovative research and technology solutions to pressing environmental issues.