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Department of Geoscience News

Geoscience is an all-encompassing term used to refer to the earth sciences. The Department of Geosciences offers programs at the undergraduate and graduate levels where students can learn about topics such as earth processes; the origin and evolution of our planet; the chemical and physical properties of minerals, rocks, and fluids; the structure of our mobile crust; the history of life; and the human adaptation to earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, and floods.

Current Geoscience News

The top of a 性视界传媒 graduation cap overlooking a crowd of graduation students at Commencement.
People |

The newest Rebel grads reflect on their time at 性视界传媒 and share what the future holds.

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Campus News |

性视界传媒鈥檚 commencement tradition highlights exceptional students who embody the highest level of academic excellence and community involvement.

Campus landscape
Campus News |

Some of the hottest headlines featuring 性视界传媒 faculty, staff, and students.

a student studying at a wheelchair accessible desk in Greenspun
Campus News |

Decades of infrastructure improvements and evolving standards show how 性视界传媒 has embedded accessibility into campus planning, design, and digital spaces.

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Business and Community |

性视界传媒 engineering and science students test an experiential course partially designed for NASA astronauts who will soon return to the moon.

First day of classes.
Campus News |

The top news stories starring university students and staff.

Geoscience In The News

Las Vegas Weekly

Amid the worst regional drought the Western U.S. has seen in 1,200 years, and in a year when Rocky Mountain snowpack levels also hit record lows, the Colorado River system is now barely over one-third of its total hydrological capacity, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.

NPR

The owner of a uranium mine near the Grand Canyon wants state regulators to allow a higher level of arsenic in groundwater under the facility. Two scientists, however, object to the proposal, arguing regulators shouldn鈥檛 approve it until a more robust investigation into the elevated arsenic levels takes place. Energy Fuels Resources, the owner of the Pinyon Plain Mine, says its investigation was thorough and that operators aren鈥檛 at fault.

Scientific American

Flecks of minerals captured in diamonds show hidden connections between Earth鈥檚 surface and its deep interior

Only Natural Diamonds Magazine

Not all colorless gemstones are created equal. When it comes to the comparison of white sapphire vs diamond, white sapphires are often touted as an alternative to natural diamonds. In reality, they are distinctly different stones with different origins.

The Northern Miner

The hunger for uranium won鈥檛 abate anytime soon as the heavy metal鈥檚 spot price hovers near two-year-highs, but some geologists warn easy-to-mine reserves are shrinking. Enter what may sound unusual: mining uranium from ocean water.

Gizmodo

After decades of chasing after a rare hexagonal diamond, a Chinese team says their iteration of the elusive material is the most important yet.

Geoscience Experts

Carrie Tyler is a marine conservation paleobiologist.
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An expert on water resources, paleoclimatology, and environmental pollution. 
An expert in Mars geochemistry, astrobiology, water-rock interactions, and snow dynamics.
Brian Hedlund in an expert in microbial ecology at high temperatures, biofuels and genomics. 
An expert in geology, paleoecology, paleontology, and the history of geology.
Lachniet is an expert in paleoclimatology, quaternary geology, climate change and stable isotope geochemistry.

Recent Geoscience Accomplishments

Steve Rowland (Geoscience) published "The Cambrian of the Grand Canyon: Refinement of a Classic Stratigraphic Model" in GSA Today with Carol Dehler, professor at Utah State University; James Hagadorn of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science; Frederick Sundberg, Karl Karlstrom and Laura Crossey of the University of New Mexico; and鈥
Thomas Lamont (Geology) had a paper titled, "Porphyry copper formation driven by water fluxed crustal anatexis during flat-slab subduction," published on Nov. 4 in Nature Geoscience. It has long been recognized that many of the worlds largest porphyry copper deposits (copper ore formed by magmatic-hydrothermal fluids associated with granitic鈥
Krishnakumar Nangeelil, Peter Dimpfl, Zaijing Sun (all Health Physics and Diagnostic Sciences), Shichun Huang (currently faculty at UTK, a former member of the department of geosciences at 性视界传媒), and Mayir Mamtimin (Halliburton) published an article titled, "Preliminary Study on Forgery Identification of Hetian Jade with Instrumental Neutron鈥
Simon Jowitt and Brian McNulty (Geoscience) recently published a paper in Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews on critical metals 鈥 often discarded as a byproduct of mining operations 鈥 that are vital components in the global push for low-carbon energy generation, storage, and transport. Researchers explored the current global鈥
Amanda Ostwald and Arya Udry (both Geoscience) and their collaborators, Valerie Payr茅 (NAU), Esteban Gazel (Cornell), and Peiyu Wu (Cornell) published a paper, 鈥淭he Role of Assimilation and Factional Crystallization in the Evolution of the Mars Crust鈥, in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters. Ostwald is geoscience graduate student, and鈥
Shichun Huang (Geoscience), Min Li (Physics and Astronomy) and their colleagues published an article, Sulfur Isotopic Signature of Earth Established by Planetesimal Volatile Evaporation, in Naure Geoscience. Using sophisticated ab initio and thermodynamics calculations, they showed that the Earth's sulfur, an important volatile element, budget is鈥