Archive for January, 2007

Ward Honored for Distinguished Professional Service

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Geology librarian Dederick C. (Dedy) Ward of Anacortes, Washington was honored recently by the Geoscience Information Society (GSIS) for distinguished service to the profession. In accepting the 2006 Mary B. Ansari Distinguished Service Award on Ward’s behalf at the Society’s Philadelphia meeting, Lura E. Joseph (Geology Librarian, University of Illinois) cited Ward’s extensive contributions to the professionalization of geoscience librarianship and his personal scholarship.

Ward was one of the founding members of the Geoscience Information Society in 1965 and served as co-chair of the first International Conference on Geological Information, held in London in 1978. The meeting brought together for the first time specialists who dealt in geoscientific information; 190 delegates from 17 countries participated.

He was author or co-author of three editions of Geologic Reference Sources published between 1967 and 1981. The classic work helped educate generations of information specialists. In 1984, together with Albert Carozzi, Ward published Geology Emerging, a catalog illustrating the history of geology through rare books held by the University of Illinois library. His 1989 study of “Information-seeking behavior of geoscientists,” co-authored with Julie Bichteler, won the GSIS Best Paper Award the following year.

Ward holds degrees in geology from Washington and Lee University and the University of Colorado and an MA in librarianship from the University of Denver. In the 1960s and 1970s he served as Head of Science Libraries and Earth Science Librarian at the University of Colorado, Boulder. In 1980 he moved to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as Geology Librarian and Associate Professor of Library Administration. He retired from UIUC in 1989 to pursue another love, painting. His art reflects his interest and background in geology.

Richard D. Walker, a long-time colleague, summarized: “Dedy was always mindful of the role information played in the lives of both the working geoscientist and the geoscience information specialist and was always ready to act as the liaison between those professions.”

GSIS is an international professional organization devoted to improving the exchange of information in the earth sciences. The membership consists of librarians, editors, cartographers, educators, and information professionals. Information about the Society may be found at its website www.geoinfo.org.

University of Texas at Austin Opens New Facility

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2007

Two of the country’s leading research organizations in the fields of supercomputing and geophysics gained a new 94,000-square-foot home January 11, 2007 on The University of Texas at Austin J.J. Pickle Research Campus. The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) and the Jackson School of Geosciences’ Institute for Geophysics already work closely together on computation problems related to Earth’s environment. Scientists at the institute study processes shaping the Earth, including sea-level fluctuations, climate change and geologic hazards such as earthquakes and tsunamis. Much of their work relies on high-end computation. TACC is one of the leading advanced computing centers in the United States. Already home to Lonestar, one of the country’s largest academic supercomputers, TACC will soon manage Ranger, a new National Science Foundation-funded system that will be one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world, with peak performance of more than 420 teraflops.

As demand for supercomputing has increased, TACC has grown from a staff of 14 to 60. The new building offers room for further expansion. TACC occupies the building’s lower floor, which is being modified to accommodate Ranger.

The Institute for Geophysics occupies the top two floors. In addition to gaining access to TACC’s computing systems, researchers at the institute are now connected by walkways to the Jackson School’s other major research unit, the Bureau of Economic Geology. Scientists at the bureau and institute share research interests related to the environment, geophysics, tectonics and the exploration for natural resources. The new building will facilitate closer collaboration. The building also marks the first time the entire staff of the institute will be on The University of Texas at Austin campus. Since moving to Austin from its dockside facilities at The University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston in 1982, the institute has been housed in rental space.

PBS&J designed the building. Flintco began construction in November 2005 and completed the project ahead of schedule and on budget. The building meets standards of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Green Building Rating System.

About UTIG

The University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG) is known internationally as a leading academic research group in geology and geophysics. Founded in 1972, it is a part of the Jackson School of Geosciences at The University of Texas at Austin. UTIG scientists investigate the dynamic geophysical processes that influence Earth’s structure, environment and climate. They also develop new mathematical models, data processing and imaging techniques that are relevant to natural resource exploration, the assessment of geologic hazards and modeling global climate change.

About TACC

The Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin is a leading research center for advanced computational science, engineering and technology. TACC’s mission is to enable scientific discovery and enhance society through the application of advanced computing technologies. As a leading advanced computing center, TACC fulfills its mission by conducting a comprehensive, integrated set of activities ranging from operations to research. TACC’s activities span a wide variety of advanced computational technologies, from cutting-edge hardware to mainstream technologies augmented by advanced networks and software. TACC has world-class infrastructure and tremendous staff expertise in these areas, enabling it to be a leading center for the application of advanced computing technologies to important and challenging problems.

For more information about the Jackson School, contact J.B. Bird at jbird@jsg.utexas.edu, 512-232-9623.

Call for Submissions to the Journal Palynology

Sunday, January 21st, 2007

Palynology publishes high-standard scientific research of interest on all aspects of organic microfossils (i.e., palynomorphs: spores, pollen, dinocysts, acritarchs, fungal spores, chitinozoans, etc.). We encourage submissions not only in the traditional areas of stratigraphic biostratigraphy and paleoecology/paleoenvironments, but also those utilizing palynomorphs together with the collateral disciplines of sequence stratigraphy, geochemistry, geoarcheology, organic petrology, etc. Short notes on preparation methods, taxonomy, storage problems, etc., are welcomed. If increased numbers of high quality submissions are received, AASP (a volunteer-based non-profit society) would consider publishing two issues per year.

Palynology is a premiere, peer-reviewed journal for the palynological sciences published annually by the American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists (AASP). It is listed in the Thomson Scientific’s Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) abstracting service, and is available through Geoscience World (GSW), BioOne, and JSTOR. Visit our web site for further information about submitting to Palynology and other AASP publications (www.palynology.org).

SMU Creates Heroy Geoscience Student Support Fund

Friday, January 19th, 2007

Southern Methodist University’s (SMU) Institute for the Study of Earth and Man (ISEM) received a gift of $25,000 from Jack Hamilton, an ISEM trustee, given in memory of William B. Heroy Jr, former president of ISEM and professor emeritus of geological studies. The gift is to initiate the Heroy Geoscience Student Support Fund in the institute, which supports research in the geosciences and archaeology at SMU.

“This gift is intended to recognize Bill Heroy’s lifelong commitment to the geosciences and his understanding of the importance of financial support in preparing future geoscientists,” said Hamilton, a longtime associate of Heroy in the senior management of the Geotechnical Corporation and in the Geotechnical Division of the Teledyne Corporation.

Heroy joined SMU in 1969 as the vice president of finance and then became a professor in the geosciences. He succeeded his father as president of ISEM in 1971. Heroy donated journals and papers to the ISEM reading room, based on the personal library of his father, to provide academic support to the geology and anthropology departments.

Heroy had leadership roles in a number of professional organizations at the local and national level, including the Dallas Geological Society, the Dallas Geophysical Society, the Geological Society of America, the American Association of Petroleum Geologists and the American Geological Institute.

“This gift is a fitting way to commemorate Bill Heroy’s life and contributions, and we at ISEM are deeply grateful,” said Louis L. Jacobs, ISEM president and professor in geological studies. “We share Jack Hamilton’s hope that the fund will grow and support a growing number of students in the geosciences.”

Anyone wishing to contribute to the Heroy Geoscience Student Support Fund should make the contribution to The ISEM Foundation, in care of Dr. Louis L. Jacobs, ISEM at SMU, Box 0274, Dallas, Texas 75275-0274, and indicate that the contribution is for the Heroy Fund.

2007 Manitoba Paleontolgy Symposium Announced

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

The 2007 Manitoba Paleontology Symposium will be held at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in the town of Morden, Manitoba, Canada on September 27th - 29th, 2007.

The Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre has a 35 year history, we as the largest collection of marine reptile fossils in Canada including a 13 meter long mosasaur specimen. Symposium attendees will be able to explore the Discovery Centre and learn about Canada’s natural history.

As well as guest speakers there will be display area given to researchers to present their projects. There will also be an Expo where paleontology, archeology and laboratory suppliers can display their goods and services.

For more information on this symposium including registration information, go to the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre’s website, www.discoverfossils.com.

Hamilton College Names Domack to Environmental Studies Chair

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

Clinton, N.Y. - Hamilton College Dean of Faculty Joseph Urgo has announced the appointment of Professor of Geosciences Eugene Domack to the Joel W. Johnson Family Professorship in Environmental Studies. The newly endowed chair, established this year by Hamilton alumnus and charter trustee Joel W. Johnson ’65 and his wife Elizabeth B. Johnson with a $2.5 million gift, is the largest endowed professorship in the college’s history. Income from the endowment will support the chairholder’s compensation, benefits and a research program involving undergraduates.

“Eugene Domack is among Hamilton’s most prolific and nationally recognized scientists,” said Urgo. “He epitomizes Hamilton’s teacher-scholar model, constructing a career that has him moving seamlessly from classroom to laboratory to fieldwork. We are pleased to name him as the inaugural Johnson Family Professor of Environmental Sciences, and we look forward to his continued contributions to the academic community at Hamilton.”

Domack, who joined Hamilton College in 1985, studies the paleohistory of Antarctica’s Larsen Ice Shelf. His research has focused on understanding how Antarctica’s climate had varied over the past hundreds and thousands of years and how those changes shaped the continent, particularly its ice shelves. His work has also taken him to Africa and Greenland to study an ancient period in Earth’s history, some 700 million years ago, when the entire planet was believed to have been covered in ice, the so called Snowball Earth. Locally, Domack studies the depositional history and environmental consequences of the Oneida Creek delta in Oneida Lake.

“The Johnson Family Professorship is a generous and welcome gesture which will boost the college’s curricular focus on environmental sciences,” said Domack. “I am extremely humbled by this award and hope to live up to the expectations of such an honor and make the most of the opportunities the professorship provides.”

Domack has always made it a priority to include undergraduate students within his research strategy. Since 1987, he has taken more than 100 undergraduates to Antarctica from Hamilton and other colleges and universities. “The research funding provided with this professorship will allow increased student involvement in collaborative field or analytical research and conference experiences, appropriate to environmental and/or paleoenvironmental studies in an international context,” explained Domack. International collaboration is a powerful venue for students to learn both the applications of the discipline and the cultural or social contexts of the issues they are investigating.”

Having been funded continuously since 1987 by the National Science Foundation (NSF) Office of Polar Programs, Domack has also served on several NSF panel advisory boards. He has participated in 20 field seasons in Antarctica, 13 as chief scientist.

Domack was a 2004 Guggenheim Fellow and a Joint Oceanographic Institutions 2000 Distinguished Lecturer. He has been an invited speaker at more than 20 international conferences including the 1999 American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting. In 2002, he organized an international workshop on Antarctic Peninsula Climate Variability at Hamilton.

In 2004, Domack began a three-year study focused on determining if the collapse of Antarctica’s Larsen B Ice Shelf was unique or part of a cycle that extends over hundred of thousands of years. His research revealed that the event was indeed unique. “Our work contributes to the understanding of these climatic changes — where they are occurring first and with greatest magnitude and impact upon the environment,” said Domack. During this study, he also discovered an underwater volcano as well as a vast new ecosystem revealed by the shelf’s collapse.

His research findings have been published widely, including Nature, Marine Geology, Antarctic Science, and Geological Society of America Bulletin, and he has coauthored or co-edited four books, including The Earth’s Glacial Record.

The students who have participated in Hamilton’s Antarctica program say that Domack is a driven, motivated and inspiring mentor whose passion for research is obvious, and these students (usually geosciences majors) seem to share this same passion. Over the years, Domack has supervised more than 100 senior theses, 25 of which have appeared in peer-reviewed publications.

“I am professor today because of Gene’s mentoring,” says former student Matthew Kirby ’94. “Without Gene, it is hard to imagine my life’s path. As geology major, I was somewhat directionless for my first couple years. Everything changed my junior year when Gene offered me the opportunity to pursue research along the Antarctic Peninsula. What an experience! Sure, the science was great, but the life experience was priceless. After my Antarctic voyage, I returned to Hamilton with determination to pursue sediment-climate research in graduate school, and today, I am a professor of paleoclimatology at California State University, Fullerton.”

Hamilton’s environmental studies program explores complex connections between the environment and human life and culture through an interdisciplinary program. Students majoring in this program select a specific track to follow in the humanities, social sciences or natural sciences. Faculty members in biology, geosciences, government, economics, anthropology, philosophy and English, among others, contribute to this program, but the Johnson Family chairholder must be a faculty member in one
of the physical science departments.

TeraGrid ‘07 Conference: “Call for Papers” deadline extended to February 8

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

To accommodate the holiday period, the deadline for papers for the TeraGrid ‘07 conference has been extended to February 8, 2007.

TeraGrid ‘07 is accepting papers, demonstrations, posters, tutorials, and birds-of-a-feather (BOF) sessions for the second annual TeraGrid conference to be held June 4-8, 2007, at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Last year’s conference hosted more than 450 interested people including scientists, engineers, faculty, post docs, students, high school teachers, representatives from federal agencies, industry representatives, and staff from TeraGrid resource providers and partners.

Full papers (3-5 pages) are due February 8 for peer review. Notice of paper acceptance is March 16.

Submissions should address the development of grid computing capabilities and the applications of the TeraGrid to research and education, in particular:

  • Scientific impacts resulting from work on the TeraGrid and/or with TeraGrid partners.
  • Technology development, capabilities and services.
  • Education, outreach and training including grid education and training.

All accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings that will be available at the conference. Additionally, the review process will identify papers that will be selected for further review and possible inclusion in a special section of the Communications of the ACM (CACM).

Student Contests — TeraGrid ‘07 will also host three competitions for students!

  • The Impact of Cyberinfrastructure on Your World.
    High school, undergraduate and graduate students are invited to showcase their talents and creativity to convey how cyberinfrastructure will impact the world. Entries are due April 13, 2007.
  • TeraGrid Student Research Competition.
    Undergraduate and graduate students are invited to submit posters describing the applications and benefits of grid computing in their research endeavors. Poster abstracts are due April 13, 2007.
  • TeraGrid: Advancing Scientific Discovery Competition.
    This onsite event will address scientific discovery and problem solving. Sponsored student teams will be given eight to 12 problems from various scientific domains and will be asked to solve these problems within 24 hours. Teams must register to participate by May 4, 2007.

See http://www.teragrid.org/events/teragrid07 for more information on the paper submission process and the student competitions!

Bradford Washington, Cartographer, Museum Director, Photographer, and Mountaineer Passes Away

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

Bradford Washburn, founder and former director of the Boston Science Museum, cartographer, photographer, author, and mountaineer passed away at his home in Lexington, Massachusetts on January 10, 2007 at the age of 96.

Washburn had a love of mountains, photography and education. With those passions he became the first person to climb seven North American peaks. He created maps and discovered climbing routes that are still used today. Most notably, Washburn led a team of scientists who, using global positioning system measurements, revised the height of Mt. Everest to 29,035 feet, seven feet taller than originally thought.

He was an adventurer who photographed mountain peaks from leaning out the side doors of single-engine planes and using a 53-pound camera. His photos from those precarious positions went on to be used in map making, art exhibits, and books.

Washburn graduated from Harvard University in 1933 and in 1960 received his master’s degree in cartography from Harvard. He was the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates and awards, including the American Geological Institute award for Outstanding Contribution to Public understanding of Geology in 1996. To honor his legacy of educating people on the beauty and power of mountains, the museum of American mountaineering in Golden Colorado will be named after him when it opens in the winter of 2008.

Washburn is survived by his wife, Barbara, who shared his passion for mountains, as well as his three children, nine grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

THE KECK GEOLOGY CONSORTIUM ANNOUNCES APPLICATIONS ARE BEING EXCEPTED

Tuesday, January 16th, 2007

The Keck Geology Consortium is now accepting applications for Summer 2007. For more information please go to the Keck website HTTP://KECK.WOOSTER.EDU

The Keck Geology Consortium is focused on enriching undergraduate education through development of high-quality research experience. As an independent organization, housed at The College of Wooster, the Consortium establishes its program priorities based on the educational philosophies of the member colleges: dedication to excellence in undergraduate education, offering students comprehensive and rigorous educational opportunities that promote intellectual growth, integrity, responsibility, and a sense of both individuality and membership in community.

The Consortium has been a fundamental component of the undergraduate-research landscape for 20 years, supporting more than 980 students from over 80 schools across the nation. “Keck” has a tangible meaning in the geoscience community: talented students gaining field experience supported by dedicated, master teachers.

AGI to Offer Earth from Space

Tuesday, January 16th, 2007

The American Geological Institute (AGI) is pleased to offer as part of its catalog of geoscience resource and interest publications Earth from Space by Andrew K. Johnston, a geographer at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s Center for Earth and Planetary Studies.

Earth from Space (ISBN: 1552978206) enables readers to see our planet from orbit. The book shows how satellite imaging — also called remote sensing — works and showcases some of the most extraordinary photographs ever published. This stunning hardcover book contains several hundred satellite images in both true and false color with subjects ranging from geology, human impact on Earth, to biology and more.

The Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service has launched a new online and traveling exhibition based on the book Earth from Space. Exhibition visitors will experience 40 views of the planet divided into five sections. In addition, a digital video globe displays remote sensing data covering weather patterns and geologic events to give visitors a worldwide view of the types of events visible from space.

The exhibition “Earth from Space” opened to the public at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. in November of 2006 where it remained on display through January 7, 2007. It will tour the nation through 2009. AGI has been actively promoting the exhibition “Earth from Space” and related online educational resources as part of the Earth Science Week 2006 Toolkit.

To learn more about this exciting exhibition, find out when it’s coming to your area, or to download corresponding educational resources, go to http://www.earthfromspace.si.edu/.

For information on the publication Earth from Space, please visit http://www.agiweb.org/pubs/index.html.

The American Geological Institute is a nonprofit federation of 44 scientific and professional associations that represent more than 120,000 geologists, geophysicists, and other earth scientists. Founded in 1948, AGI provides information services to geoscientists, serves as a voice of shared interests in our profession, plays a major role in strengthening geoscience education, and strives to increase public awareness of the vital role the geosciences play in mankind’s use of resources and interaction with the environment. More information about AGI can be found at http://www.agiweb.org. The Institute also provides a public-outreach web site, http://www.earthscienceworld.org