MEAS Department Seminar
Speaker – Anna B. Lowe, Postdoc, MEAS – NCState (hosted by R. He) Seminar Title – Modeling of coastal processes and Lagrangian transport around the Monterey Peninsula Abstract – The Monterey Peninsula is an…
Speaker – Anna B. Lowe, Postdoc, MEAS – NCState (hosted by R. He) Seminar Title – Modeling of coastal processes and Lagrangian transport around the Monterey Peninsula Abstract – The Monterey Peninsula is an…
Biomass feedstock utilization has the potential to reduce dependency on fossil fuels and improve energy security while decarbonizing our energy needs. Energy crops, short rotation woody crops, municipal solid waste,…
Speaker - Jared Rennie, NC State University’s North Carolina Institute for Climate Studies (NCICS), hosted by K. Dello Seminar Title - It’s All Relative: Examining Heat Severity Using the United…
Speaker - Ted Shepherd, Grantham Professor of Climate Science, University of Reading, UK (hosted by W. Robinson) Please see your email for a Zoom link. Seminar Title - Bringing physical reasoning into statistical practice…
Speaker - Julia Cisneros, geologist and Postdoctoral researcher at Texas A&M University, The University of Texas at Austin, and Texas Tech University funded by an NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship -…
Speaker - Tal Ben-Horin, Assistant Professor, College of Veterinary Medicine, NC State University (hosted by A. Schnetzer) Seminar Title - Disease impacts associated with expanding marine aquaculture production Bio - Tal Ben-Horin…
Speaker - Sarah Crump, University of California - Santa Cruz, hosted by E. Hyland. Seminar Title - Ecological impacts of Late Quaternary climate change: New insights from ancient DNA in lake…
Speaker - Antonia Sebastian, UNC- Chapel Hill, (hosted by E. Hyland) Seminar Title - TBA Please see your email for a Zoom link.
Speaker - Adam Curry, NCState, MEAS Seminar Title - Large-volume silicic magmatism and ignimbrites in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado Abstract - Large crustal silicic magma reservoirs and their associated ignimbrite eruptions are important because…