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Stanford Earth and Graduate School of Business collaborate on new executive program to help young leaders build a sustainable future.
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Over the last five years, 37 percent of SURGE alumni have entered graduate school, 26 percent are pursuing geoscience-related industry careers, and more than a third are completing their undergrad degrees.
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Over the last five years, 37 percent of SURGE alumni have entered graduate school, 26 percent are pursuing geoscience-related industry careers, and more than a third are completing their undergrad degrees.
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Stanford Earth's Howard Zebker was chosen by the American Geophysical Union to be one of its 60 new Fellows.
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Faculty and staff can borrow bikes at will to get around campus.
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Scientist and emeritus faculty member has been a leader in clarifying geological relationships with plate tectonics.
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Dean Pamela Matson praised their “intelligence, passion, commitment, and drive” and expressed optimism in the graduates’ ability to tackle many of the major challenges humanity faces this century.
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Alumni, faculty, students, and staff gathered for brunch at the O’Donohue Family Stanford Educational Farm on May 21.
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Explore the rich 125-year history of groundbreaking research at Stanford's School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences using our interactive timeline.
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Segall’s election brings to 8 the number of Stanford Earth faculty who are members of the National Academies of Science or Engineering.
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Beneath Cambodia's troubled history with the Khmer Rouge lies a complex agricultural legacy that reaches back centuries. A group of Stanford students traveled to Cambodia with Earth science and mental health experts to explore the ways food, water, and human conflict have shaped the country.
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At Stanford's annual Connecting the Dots conference, Marcia McNutt told participants that to promote good environmental behavior they must tailor their messages for different types of audiences.
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At Stanford Earth, every day is an opportunity to explore our planet and identify sustainable practices to manage our resources for the next generation.
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A group of scientists, writers, students, local community members shared their written stories and poems about the Earth at the first Rooted Words speaker series event.
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Thirty Stanford undergraduates traveled to Paris for the historic COP21 international climate change negotiations and came back with stories to share.
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Every year, high school students spend the summer working in the field and in research labs with Stanford Earth faculty and advisors. Their experience culminates with a poster presentation of their work at the AGU Fall Meeting in San Francisco.
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For the second year in a row, Stanford Earth's Miles Traer is drawing cartoons for the AGU Fall Meeting that are inspired by posters and sessions at the scientific conference.
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Each year, the American Geophysical Union recognizes early career scientists whose work ensures a sustainable future.
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Stanford Earth's Cassandra Brooks and Daniel Swain are among twenty-two environmental scholars who received this year's Switzer Environmental Fellowship.
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Undergraduate researchers pursue issues of food and soil while dodging tornadoes at Stanford’s School of Earth, Energy & Environmental Sciences.
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The award is presented by the Paleontological Society each year to a scientist under 40 whose early work reflects excellence and promise in the science of paleontology.
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Rod Ewing has been honored with three prestigious awards in the geological and mineralogical sciences.
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New awards fund range of projects from improved detection of gas leaks to conversion of natural gas into liquid fuels, and climate-related policy studies.