In The News

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Rapidly-Intensifying Tropical Cyclones Likely to Increase Flood Hazard in the North Atlantic as Climate Warms
March 15, 2024
Author
Written by Cara Clase, Ph.D., Center for Policy Research on Energy and the Environment

Based on the findings of a new study conducted by Prof. Michael Oppenheimer, and other Princeton researchers, rapidly-intensifying (RI) events are already more hazardous than normal tropical cyclones (TCs) and future climate warming causes large increases in the likelihood of RI close to land.

Princeton’s S.C.R.A.P. Lab Turns Food Waste into Compost
March 1, 2024

In the fall of 2023, Prof. Xinning Zhang, Geosciences research specialist Shannon Haynes, and Geosciences lab manager Danielle Schmitt worked with the S.C.R.A.P (Sustainable Composting Research at Princeton) lab in providing a freshmen seminar “FRS 115: Decomposing: The Science of Composting.” Students investigated the effect of adding compostable serviceware on the compost maturity. This recent PAW article explains more about this collaboration between S.C.R.A.P. and the department.

‘A special place at a special time’: Inside Princeton baseball’s analytics revolution
Feb. 14, 2024
Author
Written by Joseph Uglialoro, The Daily Princetonian

“First, baseball analytics can show us what’s happening,” Haumacher told The Daily Princetonian during a sit down interview.... After arriving at Princeton, one of Haumacher’s first contacts was Adam Maloof. Maloof and Haumacher hit the ground running, placing advertisements around campus in search of student leaders who were interested in data analysis and willing to help the Princeton baseball team.

Congratulations to Dr. Kewei Zhao for successfully defending his Ph.D. Thesis
Jan. 2, 2024
Author
Written by The Department of Geosciences

The Department of Geosciences and Princeton University congratulates Dr. Kewei Zhao on successfully defending his Ph.D. thesis: “Calcium Dynamics in Marine Environment: Calcium Speciation in Seawater and Transformation of Amorphous Calcium Carbonate" on Wednesday, December 20, 2023.

Congratulations to Dr. Jianshu Duan for successfully defending his Ph.D. Thesis
Jan. 2, 2024
Author
Written by The Department of Geosciences

The Department of Geosciences and Princeton University congratulates Dr. Jianshu Duan on successfully defending his Ph.D. thesis: “Abiotic Transformation of Terrestrial Natural Organic Matter Probed by Multimodal Spectroscopy" on Tuesday, December 19, 2023.

John Higgins: Hunting for ancient air
Dec. 21, 2023
Author
Written by Liz Fuller-Wright and Denise Valenti, Office of Communications

At the northern and southern tips of our planet are tiny bubbles of air trapped for millions of years within polar ice. These microscopic time capsules hold a record of Earth’s atmosphere — and thus its climate history. (Higgins, Shackleton, Bender mention)

Paleoclimate Scientist Udara Amarathunga on an International Ocean Discovery Program to the Gibraltar Strait
Dec. 21, 2023
Author
Written by The Department of Geosciences

On December 12, 2023, the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 401 departed from Amsterdam to begin a two-month scientific journey to the Gibraltar Strait. Its mission is to uncover these climate secrets buried beneath hundreds of meters of water and rock. Onboard will be Harry Hess postdoctoral research fellow and paleoclimate scientist Udara Amarathunga.

"The Fall 2023 Smilodon" is now published
Dec. 20, 2023
Author
Written by The Department of Geosciences

This year’s The Smilodon: The Newsletter of the Department of Geosciences now available online. Featured article: In Memoriam: W. Jason Morgan - October 10, 1935 - July 31, 2023

Iceland volcano: The seismic sounds as a sudden eruption tore open the Earth
Dec. 19, 2023
Author
Written by Richard Gray, BBC

Listen to the cacophony of seismic activity that ripped a 4km-long fissure in the Reykjanes peninsula has been turned into audible clips; features Suzan van der Lee, a professor at Northwestern and GEO alumna, who received her Ph.D. at Princeton in 1996.


 

Browse News Archive

Congratulations to Dr. Xuyuan Ellen Ai for successfully defending her Ph.D. Thesis
Jan. 24, 2023
Author
Written by The Department of Geosciences

Congratulations to Dr. Ellen Ai on successfully defending her Ph.D. thesis "On the Role of the Southern Ocean in the Glacial-Interglacial Cycles of the Past 460,000 Years: Changes in Wind-Driven Upwelling and Ocean Front Position Revealed by Reconstructed Surface Ocean Nutrient Conditions and Temperatures."

Congratulations to Dr. Jack G. Murphy for successfully defending his Ph.D. Thesis
Jan. 9, 2023
Author
Written by The Department of Geosciences

Congratulations to Dr. Jack G. Murphy on successfully defending her Ph.D. thesis "Hydrogeochemical Support for Microbial Habitability in an Ancient, Hypersaline, Thermal, and Radiogenic Subsurface in South Africa" on Tuesday, May 2, 2023.

Bering Land Bridge formed surprisingly late during last ice age
Dec. 27, 2022
Author
Written by Alaina O'Regan, Office of the Dean for Research

Princeton scientists found that the Bering Land Bridge, the strip of land that once connected Asia to Alaska, emerged far later during the last ice age than previously thought. (Sigman, Farmer, Pico ’14 mention)

Modeling Earth’s future: Princeton researchers project a planet affected by climate change
Dec. 13, 2022
Author
Written by High Meadows Environmental Institute

The work of climate modelers informs public policy and influences strategies for mitigating risks and adapting to change.

Michael Oppenheimer writes chapter in Greta Thunberg’s new book
Nov. 14, 2022
Author
Written by Molly Seltzer, Office of Communications

Princeton climate scientist Michael Oppenheimer first came to the attention of climate activist Greta Thunberg in 2019, the year of the children’s strike that made the Swedish teenager a household name across the globe.