No Images? Click here

Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
 
Spotlight: Field Expeditions
 
 
 
 

March 2018

 
Fieldwork 2018

2018 Field Guide

In the desert nation of Oman, rocks from Earth’s mantle, usually inaccessible to humans, have been thrust to the surface in the mountainous Samail Ophiolite. Among other unusual qualities, these rocks naturally take up vast amounts of atmospheric carbon and convert it to solid carbonate. In the first project of its kind, Lamont scientists join an international team, taking deep cores and performing experiments to assess the possibility of storing human-generated CO2 emissions here and in similar formations across the world. This is one of more than fifty Lamont field expeditions to take place this year.

Our 2018 Field Guide traces how, on every continent and in every ocean, Lamont scientists are continuing to explore our planet.

Read More

 
 
'X-Snow' Project Needs Your Help to Unlock the Secrets of Snow

'X-Snow' Project Needs Your Help to Unlock the Secrets of Snow

Snow plays an important role in Earth’s climate. Yet, there’s a lot we still don’t know about snow, particularly along the east coast. Marco Tedesco, who studies snow and ice at Lamont is leading an investigation into the properties of snow in the eastern U.S. Tedesco – in partnership with WNYC, a New York public radio station – is asking for help from citizen scientists to contribute to data collection to the study.

Read More

 
Researchers Map High Levels of Drugs in the Hudson River

Researchers Map High Levels of Drugs in the Hudson River

In a new study, researchers have mapped out a stew of pharmaceuticals along the Hudson River. The team says that, in some places, levels may be sufficiently high to affect fish and other aquatic life.  This is not the first study to find pharmaceuticals in the Hudson, but it is the first to look at a wide variety and chart their distribution.

Read More

 
Exploring the Microbiome of an Ocean Bacteria

Exploring the Microbiome of an Ocean Bacteria

Our scientists occasionally share their “on the ground” field expedition experiences. Graduate student Kyle Frischkorn from Lamont’s Microbial Oceanography Group, working as part of the Dyhrman Lab, has written about a sea-going study of the microbes in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre.

Read More

 
Video: Developing Carbon Management Solutions

Video: Developing Carbon Management Solutions

Lamont researchers Peter Kelemen and David Goldberg explain how they are exploring ways to store carbon dioxide permanently in subsurface carbonate minerals.

Watch Video

 
 
 
 
 

Lamont in the News
 

Could More Snow in Antarctica Slow Sea-Level Rise?
Scientific American

Earthquake or Atomic Bomb?
Science

Puerto Rico Asks a DC University to Review Possible Hurricane Maria Deaths
CNN

Pharmaceuticals in the Hudson Pose a Threat to Aquatic Life
WNYC

Shrinking Mountain Glaciers Are Affecting People Downstream
Daily Kos

The Secret History of Mercury
Science Channel

Earthquake Shakes Hudson Valley
News 12

Monsoon Upwelling That Gives Mumbai Its Fish Is Also Killing Them
Times of India

Marie Tharp, the Woman Whose Art Mapped the Bottom of the Sea
Massive Science

 

Read More »
 
FacebookTwitterYouTubeInstagramLinkedInWebsite
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
61 Route 9W
Palisades, NY 10964
Copyright © 2018 by The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York, Lamont -Doherty Earth Observatory. All Rights Reserved.
  Like 
  Tweet 
  Share 
  Forward 
Unsubscribe