Refine
Date Range Clear
Recorded by Clear
Keywords Clear
- Long Beach California 46
- Community 20
- Concordia 46
- Concordia College 46
- Concordia College Moorhead 46
- Brutal 46
- House Guests 46
- Court 46
- devestation 46
- W. Scott Olsen 46
- #womeninscience 30
- #AGU100 46
- #AGU 45
- discovery 17
- NASA 16
- Advice 9
- changing planet 8
- data 7
- career path 6
- Collaboration 6
- collobration 6
- Mentor 6
- 132 more
Partnerships Clear
- No matching terms.
Organizations Clear
- American Geophysical Union 14
- Ameican Geophysical Union 1
- American Geophsyical Union 1
- American Geopshysical Union 1
- American Geopysical Union 1
- 6 more
Places Clear
Languages Clear
- No matching terms.
Initiatives Clear
- No matching terms.
James Butler has studied atmospheric chemistry, ozone depletion for over thirty years. Now, as the Director of NOAA’s global monitoring, he helps direct research into the hole in the ozone layer and climate change. He knows firsthand that we have...
How did Biogeoscience become a recognized field of study, with its own journal and sections at AGU? What obstacles did its organizers have to overcome in order to make it a viable field and a welcome presence at AGU? In...
Lori Glaze, Acting Director of the Planetary Science Division at NASA Headquarters, works with everything from understanding asteroid trajectories and material make up to the InSight mission which recently landed a rover on Mars. It’s no exaggeration to say Lori...
Ingrid Hendy, Professor at the University of Michigan and section president-elect, shares stories about discoveries in her field and the challenges she faced. She reflected on the curious zebra striped sediment that lured her into her field – mud she...
Michael Freilich, Director of NASA's Earth Science Division, shares about his life studying the oceans and Earth as a system. While still in his high school's oceanography club, he started exploring a question about how waves move that later became...
For Ved Lekic, the opportunity to interview his mentor, Barbara Romanowicz, was a little daunting, so he brought along some questions. Once the conversation turns and Ved has a chance to answer some questions as well, we meet a very...
In begin in 1979, when Margaret Kivelson, UCLA, was part one of three women presenting a talk in which Fran Bagenal, University of Colorado Boulder, was sitting in the audience. They have been space scientists and collaborators for many years...
We won’t say how long Susan Lozier has been shaping young minds at Duke University (she may let it slip), but she talks about amazing changes that have happened during her tenure. She grew up wondering how rivers get polluted,...
Roberta Rudnick, Professor at University of California Santa Barbara, was captivated by science from a young age, witnessing the Mt. Saint Helens eruption while in college, and traveling the globe to understand plate tectonics, and how and why continents form...
Emily Schaller, project manager at NASA's National Suborbital Research Center at Ames, discusses her Ph.D. work studying the clouds on Titan and her work as a science and education. She recalled how as a young child, she would study illustrations...