Photo Essay: Open House at Lamont-Doherty
Bend a rock. Channel your historic ‘birthquake.’ Check out rocks, fossils, sediment cores and more at Lamont’s Open House on Saturday, October 11.
Lamont scientists travel the world to understand how the planet works. Once a year, the world travels to Lamont.
In a long running tradition known as Open House, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory opens its doors to the public. In talks and demonstrations, scientists share what they have been up to over the last year. Here is where to learn what makes some volcanoes more explosive than others; how deep ocean currents circulate the globe; what tree rings can tell us about climate change today and in times past. Researchers also share some of their tools for exploration, from unmanned robot submarines to portable seismometers to mass spectrometers that measure tiny bits of matter.
Open House features some classic attractions:
Dancing in a tub full of cornstarch, geophysicist Mark Spiegelman shows how rocks behave at different depths and time scales. Near the surface, rocks are brittle and break during earthquakes. Further down, rocks start to flow and over long time periods cause earth's tectonic plates to move and rearrange continents.
Seismologist Won-Young Kim, who oversees the northeastern United States' network of seismic stations, invites visitors to make their own earthquake. A temporary seismic station records nearby ground-shaking.
Oceanographer Michael Previdi demonstrates how deep ocean currents move heat and water around the planet in conveyor-like belts. In a tank filled partly with ice water dyed red, Previdi shows how the cold water sinks through the water column to spread along the bottom.
Image Carousel with 10 slides
A carousel is a rotating set of images. Use the previous and next buttons to change the displayed slide
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Slide 1: A crude plankton net of nylon stockings, string and a paper cup is used to fish for plankton. The catch is later analyzed under microscopes. Credit: All photos by Wade Martzall.
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Slide 2: In his âBathtub Scienceâ demonstration, geophysicist Marc Spiegelman shows how cornstarch mixed with water, like rocks at different depths, can be solid enough to dance on but also viscous enough to flow.
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Slide 3: The goopy consistency of cornstarch and water is a popular draw for kids.
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Slide 4: In tray after tray, some 20,000 sediment cores from every sea and ocean on earth fill the Lamont-Doherty Core Repository.
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Slide 5: The remains of tiny fossil plants from land and sea can be viewed under microscopes.
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Slide 6: Examples of the three types of rock found on earthâigneous, metamorphic and sedimentaryâare on display for visitors to see and touch.
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Slide 7: Scientists are on hand to discuss recently published research.
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Slide 8: In his âSounds of Seismologyâ demonstration, seismologist Ben Holtzman speeds up recordings of recent earthquakes to let visitors experience how sound waves travel through the planet and across its surface.
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Slide 9: In a simulation of how Strombolian eruptions work, visitors are invited to increase gas pressure inside a volcano by blowing into a tube and forcing magma out of the volcanoâs cone.
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Slide 10: Ping pong balls and whiffle balls stand in for lapilli and volcanic bombs in other eruption demonstrations. Here, visitors become volcano experimentalists as they restock the next "trash can" eruption.
Seismologist Ben Holtzman speeds up recordings of recent major earthquakes to let visitors experience how sound waves travel through the planet. This year he will also play recordings of man-made earthquakes in Oklahoma triggered by the injection of waste fracking fluid underground. Visitors can also make a map of the five biggest "birthquakes" to hit on the day they were born.
The Magmatism and Vulcanism group uses whiffle balls, ping pong balls and other household objects to demonstrate how the hurling power of volcanoes varies with temperature and pressure.
Open House also features new exhibits:
Nichole Anest, curator of Lamont's Core Repository, will lead tours of the world's largest collection of ocean sediment cores. Under the microscope, visitors can study the tiny fossil plants and animals buried in the cores that researchers use to study past climates and other earth processes. See and touch rocks, corals and other deep sea fossils and artifacts.
Marine biologists Craig Aumack and Nigel D’Souza provide a glimpse of life under Arctic sea ice. Visitors will have a chance to remotely retrieve an object using an underwater vehicle named "Brinson" while a camera provides live underwater views.
Geochemist Steven Chillrud will show how to measure the street-level pollution inhaled by cyclists. Watch personal air monitors and sensor-studded shirts that measure cyclists' vital signs in action.
Geophysicist Heather Savage will invite visitors to bend solid granite with their bare hands in the Rock Mechanics Lab. Super sensitive instruments will reveal deformation that is invisible to the eye.
Talks will be held throughout the day in three buildings.
Lectures in Monell Auditorium open with Earth Institute director Jeffrey Sachs followed by:
Atmospheric scientist Adam Sobel, “Superstorm Sandy and Climate Change.”
Microbiologist Andrew Juhl, “Sewage Contamination and Water Quality in the Hudson River.”
Seismologist James Gaherty, “Deep-earth Imaging of Continental Breakup Along the Atlantic Seaboard.”
Open House is on Saturday, October 11. More information.
Photos and updates throughout Lamont’s 2014 Open House will be posted on Twitter at #LamontOH.