Georgia Institute of TechnologySchool of Earth and Atmospheric Science
INFORMATION ABOUT

Spring 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"