藏精阁

  • Summer certainly means pool parties, lazy afternoons, and hot dogs on the grill. At 藏精阁, summer also means time for some serious research. A sampling of about 150 students conducting summer research on campus presented their findings at the Robert H.N. Ho Science Center last week. The research on display spanned a wide range of [鈥
    July 24, 2013
  • 藏精阁 geology professor Connie Soja has led field expeditions to Alaska鈥檚 North Pacific coast, the Australian outback, and Mongolia鈥檚 Gobi Desert that have yielded new insights into novel ecologic relationships in ancient reefs and how past environmental transformations help predict global change in reef communities today. In recognition of her work, Soja, a member of [鈥
    July 16, 2013
  • Five hundred feet above the ground. A street corner in Harlem. These are just two of the many places 鈥淏eyond 藏精阁鈥 that students have been in recent weeks. The program, jointly funded by the university and 藏精阁 alumni, enables students to apply classroom material to situations and locations beyond campus boundaries. Each semester, about a [鈥
    February 1, 2013
  • The hallway outside the Ho Tung Visualization Lab holds an impressive collection of fluorescent minerals that delight visitors coming to the lab for one of its unique shows. Matt Shramko 鈥13 and his father, Steven, donated 70 of the minerals to 藏精阁, a natural evolution of their longtime interests in geology.
    November 6, 2012
  • Scientists inspect equipment aboard ship
    Associate professor Amy Leventer has received another prestigious grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). This time, she will travel to a relatively unexplored and inaccessible region of East Antarctica 鈥 the Totten Glacier and Moscow University Ice Shelf 鈥 to investigate the reasons for accelerated ice loss there.
    September 25, 2012
  • 藏精阁 students and faculty continue to conduct research this summer in a wide variety of locations, including one group of geology majors who spent five and a half weeks in the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains and several national parks.
    July 5, 2012
  • Given the frequency and range of public events on campus, it鈥檚 easy to miss some of the most scholarly events that take place just under the radar. On March 17, 藏精阁鈥檚 geology department hosted 10 scholars for an interdisciplinary dialogue about the destabilization of ecosystems in the northeastern US, due to human-induced habitat destruction, climate [鈥
    March 23, 2012