| 12/18/03
Study
Finds Evidence for Global Methane Release About 600
Million Years Ago
New Findings May Have Implications for the Stability
of Today's Climate
Scientists
at the University of California, Riverside and
Columbia University have found evidence of the
release of an enormous quantity of methane gas
as ice sheets melted at the end of a global ice
age about 600 million years ago, possibly altering
the ocean's chemistry, influencing oxygen levels
in the ocean and atmosphere, and enhancing climate
warming because methane is a powerful greenhouse
gas. The study was published in today's issue of
the journal Nature. |
|
| 12/03/03
Columbia
University Researcher Links Climate to the Quality
of the World's Most Cherished Violins
There
has been considerable debate surrounding the reasons
why instruments crafted in the late 17th and early
18th centuries are tonally superior to modern instruments.
Theories range from the skill of the craftsman
to secret techniques such as a special varnish,
the drying of the wood, the storage time, or even
the use of old wood from historic structures. Lloyd
Burckle of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory,
Columbia University, and Henri Grissino-Mayer of
the Laboratory of Tree Ring Science, University
of Tennessee, have proposed an alternate hypothesis
-- climate. Their research was published in the
journal Dendrochronologia. |
|
| 11/20/03
The
President of Iceland Visits the Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory
On
November 13, 2003, President Ólafur Ragnar
Grímsson of Iceland met with researchers
from the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory to discuss
cooperative projects and stimulate opportunity
between his country and Columbia University. Grímsson
is keenly aware of the need to unite northern countries
to partake in joint research programs in the Arctic. |
|
| 11/17/03
Vice
Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, Visits the Earth
Institute
Vice
Admiral Lautenbacher, Ph.D., USN (Ret.), Undersecretary
of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, and Administrator
of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), met with members of the Earth Institute
to discuss global observation research and development
of new academic programs in Earth and environmental
policy. Lautenbacher was accompanied by the Assistant
Administrator of NOAA Research, Richard Rosen,
and several NOAA Program Coordinators. |
|
| 11/14/03
NOAA/Columbia
University Establish Cooperative Institute For
Climate Applications And Research
The
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) and Columbia University in Palisades, N.Y.,
have established a cooperative institute to study
climate applications and research. NOAA is an agency
of the U.S. Department of Commerce. |
|
| 11/11/03
GPS
Measurements Reveal Imprint of North American
Plate in Siberia
Two
Columbia University researchers, in collaboration
with scientists in Russia and the U.S., recently
resolved a decades-old debate when they discovered
that the boundary between the North American and
Eurasian tectonic plates passes through Eastern
Siberia. The study carried out by Mikhail Kogan
and Christopher Scholz at Columbia's Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory, Grigory Steblov and Dmitry Frolov
of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Robert King
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
Roland Bürgmann of the University of California,
Berkeley appeared in a recent issue of Geophysical
Research Letters. |
|
| 10/31/03
Presentations
by Columbia University Scientists at the 115th
Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America:
November 2 to 5, 2003, Seattle, Washington
A
recent study conducted by oceanographers Taro Takahashi
and Stewart Sutherland from Columbia University’s
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) and Richard
Feely and Cathy Cosca from the NOAA Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) indicates the partial
pressure of CO2 (pCO2) measured in surface waters
dramatically changed after the Pacific Decadal
Oscillation (PDO) phase shift in the Pacific Ocean
that occurred around 1990. |
|
| 10/30/03
Release
of Carbon Dioxide From the Equatorial Pacific Ocean
Intensified During the 1990s
A
recent study conducted by oceanographers Taro Takahashi
and Stewart Sutherland from Columbia University’s
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) and Richard
Feely and Cathy Cosca from the NOAA Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) indicates the partial
pressure of CO2 (pCO2) measured in surface waters
dramatically changed after the Pacific Decadal
Oscillation (PDO) phase shift in the Pacific Ocean
that occurred around 1990. |
|
| 10/24/03
Columbia
Researchers Improve Remote Mapping Techniques For
Rapid Assessment of Disaster Zones
Research
by scientists at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
at Columbia University shows that Synthetic Aperture
Radar (SAR) polarimetry is a more superior technology
for rapidly identifying disaster zones than the
currently used optical remote sensing technologies,
such as Landsat and SPOT. Their findings are published
in the Journal of Geophysical Research, and coincide
with an opportunity to outfit satellites scheduled
for deployment in 2004 with SAR polarimetry instruments. |
|
| 10/24/03
Columbia
Researchers Discover Currents Connecting Pacific
and Indian Oceans Are Colder and Deeper Than Expected
Findings could change the way scientists understand
inter-ocean and ocean-atmosphere dynamics that give rise
to the annual Asian monsoon and El Niño
Scientists
at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory have found that currents connecting
the Indian and Pacific Oceans are colder and deeper
than originally believed. This discovery may one
day help climate modelers predict the intensity
of the Asian monsoon or El Niño with greater
accuracy and with more lead-time than is currently
possible. |
|
| 10/01/03
Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory Will Co-Lead Multi-Million Dollar
Research Program to Explore Earth Processes Beneath
the Ocean Floor
The
U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the
Alliance of the Joint Oceanographic Institutions,
Inc., Texas A&M University, and Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory of Columbia University announced
today that they have signed a contract to operate
a scientific drillship as part of the Integrated
Ocean Drilling Program (IODP). The contract has
an estimated cost of $626 million over ten years. |
|
| 09/23/03
Development
of a Smart Energy Plan Is Underway to Prevent Future
Blackouts and Meet the Nation's Growth Needs
The nations current electric grid system will not work
in the future with solar and wind farms providing substantial
but intermittent power over long distances
By
2050, it will take between 15 and 20 Terawatts
(TW) of electric power to supply the North American
economy. A little under 7 TW is currently used,
with most of that consumed in the United States.
The “Smart Electric Grid of the Future” must
be able to efficiently and securely deliver this
two- to three-fold-increase in power to all corners
of the continent, in addition to being invulnerable
to security breaches, attacks, natural disasters,
and mechanical failures. The country can ill
afford more blackouts like August 14, 2003. |
|
| 09/17/03
Dee
Breger Wins First and Second Prize in First Annual
NSF/Science Magazine Award For Visualization
Dee
Breger, of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory,
has won both first and second prize in the photography
category of the first annual 2003 Science and
Engineering Visualization Challenge -- a joint
project of the National Science Foundation and
Science Magazine. |
|
| 08/12/03
JOI
Enters into Negotiations to Manage U.S. Drillship
for Integrated Ocean Drilling Program
Joint
Oceanographic Institutions (JOI), a consortium
of eighteen universities and research institutions,
announced today that it will be entering into negotiations
with the U.S. National Science Foundation to operate
a scientific drillship for the Integrated Ocean
Drilling Program (IODP). If successful, the National
Science Foundation would award $620-650 million
over 10 years to JOI for the alliance of JOI, Texas
A&M University, and Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
of Columbia University to provide long-term management
and scientific support of a non-riser drilling
vessel. |
|
| 08/11/03
Columbia
University Researcher Develops New Use For Seismic
Reflection Data: Revealing Locations And Potentials
For Mega Earthquakes
Hazards to northwestern
North America could be greater than previously thought
Researchers
have found an important new application for seismic
reflection data, commonly used to image geological
structures and explore for oil and gas. Recently
published in the journal Nature, new use of reflection
data may prove crucial to understanding the potential
for mega earthquakes. |
|
| 07/18/03
Deep
Wells Can Target Low Arsenic Aquifers in Bangladesh,
New Study Shows
Columbia researchers
advance plan to mitigate arsenic crisis
A
solution to arsenic-poisoned drinking water in
Bangladesh has come two steps closer with two new
research papers by Lex van Geen, Doherty Senior
Researcher at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory,
part of the Earth Institute at Columbia University,
and a team of researchers from Columbia. |
|
| 06/25/03
Carbon
Sequestration Could Be Employed Today To Help Alleviate
Greenhouse Emissions
Columbia University
researcher presents "A Guide to CO2 Sequestration"
Recent
congressional support to research and develop zero-emissions
plants and hydrogen fueled vehicles is a necessary
long-term solution toward reducing harmful greenhouse
gases; however, there are immediate opportunities
to render fossil fuels—currently accounting
for 85% of all commercial energy—environmentally
acceptable. |
|
06/19/03
Does
the Trigger for Abrupt Climate Change Reside
in the Ocean or in the Atmosphere?
A
Science "Review" by W.S. Broecker, the Newberry
Professor of Earth & Environmental Sciences,
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.
|
|
06/04/03
National
Science Foundation Provides Emergency “Event
Response” Funding To Study Massive Volcanic
Eruption On Anatahan, Mariana Islands
On
May 10, 2003, a volcanic eruption occurred on
Anatahan, an uninhabited island just 75 nautical
miles north of Saipan in the northwestern Pacific
Ocean. At the time of the eruption, researchers
studying the sinking (or subduction) of ocean
seafloor into the earth's mantle for the MARGINS
Program, headquartered at Columbia University's
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, were deploying
seismographic equipment in the area.
|
|
| 05/16/03
Columbia-Led
Scientists Dust Off Desert Sands From The French
Alps
NASA-funded
scientists using an atmospheric computer model
proved for the first time that dust from the
Takla-Makan desert of China traveled more than
12,400 miles (20,000 kilometers) over two weeks
time and landed atop the French Alps. Chinese
dust plumes have been known to reach North America
and even Greenland, but have never been reported
before in Europe.
|
|
| 05/02/03
Research
by Dr. Won-Young Kim at LDEO Suggests Ancient
Fault Line in Indiana Has Been Re-Activiated
Dr.
Won-Young Kim, a seismologist with the Lamont-Doherty
Earth Observatory at Columbia University, conducted
research to determine the potential hazard of
future earthquakes to the Wabash Valley Seismic
Zone in Indiana, which in 2002 suffered a 5.0
magnitude earthquake.
|
|
| 04/21/03
Governor
Pataki Announces $26 Million to Launch World
Class Rivers & Estuaries Center, Satellites
Established with RPI and Columbia
Columbia
President Lee Bollinger joined NY Governor George
Pataki in Beacon, NY, yesterday where a $26 Million
Hudson River Institute will be built. Columbia's
Lamont-Doherty campus and Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute will become satellite Hudson research
centers.
Click
HERE for current Columbia research on the Hudson
|
|
| 04/15/03
Death
Valley Field Trip Challenges Students to Think
Like Earth Scientists
With its steep, faulted
margins, upturned ancient sea beds, and modern-day
volcanic craters, Death Valley offers a front-row
seat to a panorama of Earth’s activity that
goes back 1.7 billion years and continues today.
|
|
03/28/03
Columbia
University Students Publish First Natural Hazards
and Disaster Mitigation Framework for Earthquake
and Flood Prone City of Caracas
Recently published in the
American Geophysical Union's journal EOS is an analysis
of how to build disaster resilience into the Venezuelan
capital region. The authors of the paper, Kevin Vranes
and Kristina Czuchlewski, are Columbia University
students participating in a unique academic program
that combines research in natural hazards with urban
planning and policy studies.
|
|
03/05/03
The
Antarctic AnSlope Expedition, February 25 through
April 11, 2003
Dr. Arnold L.
Gordon, of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory,
is aboard the Research Vessel Nathaniel B. Palmer
in Antarctic's northwestern Ross Sea. Gordon is the
principal investigator leading a study to build on
scientific understanding of global climate and the
crucial, but not well understood role played by a
frontal zone known as the Antarctic Slope Front (ASF)
occurring near the upper continental slope of much
of Antarctic's perimeter. go to reports
home.
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