
Fall 2003 Seminar Schedule
- Jan. 10
- Dr. Jay Brandes, University of Texas
"Origins of organic matter to Andean Rivers - A stable isotopic perspective"
- Jan. 17
- Dr. David Furbish, Florida State University
"Fretting about Georgia-Florida water: A theory for the development of (unreasonably) complicated karstic flow that we cope with, from water you give us"
- Jan. 24
- Dr. Michael Hochella, Virginia Institute of Technology
"Nanoscience and technology: The next revolution in the Earth and environmental sciences"
- Jan. 31
- Dr. Timothy Shaw, University of South Carolina
"The impact of subterranean mixing on the export of trace elements to the coastal ocean"
- Feb. 7
- Dr. John Neilson-Gammon, Texas A&M University
"Observations and simulations of Houston ozone meteorology"
- Feb. 21
- Dr. Wenlu Zhu, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
"Evolution of permeability and pore structure in seafloor hydrothermal vent samples"
- Feb. 28
- Dr. Yinon Rudich, Harvard University
"Suppression and promotion of precipitation by aerosols: the multi-faceted role of dust"
- Mar. 14
- Dr. Paul Ziemann, University of California-Riverside
"Chemistry of aerosol formation from alkene-ozone meteorology"
- Mar. 28
- Dr. Samuel Bowring, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Apr. 4
- Dr. James Crawford, NASA Langley
- Apr. 11
- Dr. Timothy Wallington, Ford Motor Company
- Apr. 18
- Dr. Brian Ridley, NCAR
"Aircraft measurements of reactive constituents from the Arctic boundary layer to the tropical tropopause"
- Apr. 25
- Dr. John Delaney, University of Washington
"A submarine network of interactive laboratories at the scale of a tectonic plate - A new paradigm in Ocean and Earth sciences"
- May 2
- Dr. John Seinfeld, California Institute of Technology
"Aerosols and climate"