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Hydroacoustic signals captured by the world’s international nuclear monitoring system suggest an underwater landslide may ...
Understanding the chemical processes affecting minerals, water, and air at or just below the earth's surface, typically below about 200 degrees C.
Studying the tectonic forces within the Earth give rise to continents, ocean basins, mountain ranges, earthquake belts, and most volcanoes, along with the resulting deformation of geological ...
The study of the oceans and ecology of marine organisms in the geologic past, largely through the marine sedimentary record. The Human Ecology Laboratory groups together students and researchers to ...
Cryosphere and polar science study the frozen water part of the Earth system, ranging from the glaciers of Greenland to the ice sheets of the Antarctic. Antarctica photo by Jack Pan.
Measuring the movement of defined points on the earth's surface to better understand the stresses and strains affecting the crust and upper mantle.
The study of the production, transportation, and deposition of rock particles at varying time scales.
Understanding the chemical processes affecting minerals, water, and air at high temperatures and pressures, typically deep below earth's surface. Specializing in high-precision isotopic analyses, ...
Using radioactive isotope systems to determine the age and origins of minerals and rocks, primarily as tracers of magmatic processes and the evolution of the earth. Organic molecules in natural waters ...
The study of the earth's changing magnetic field at geological and societal timescales, especially through the analysis of remanent magnetism in rocks and human artifacts.
The study of the radiation, transmission, and scattering of sound, with particular emphasis on low-frequency sounds related to earth processes.
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