Photograph by G. McGimsey, USGS
A view up the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes from the Overlook Cabin above Three Forks in Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska. The valley is filled with up to 200 meters of ash-flow deposits from the 1912 eruption of Novarupta Volcano. The rim of Katmai Caldera is on the skyline at left.

Stevie Seibert
907-474-5229
4/13/12

One hundred years ago this June, a three-day explosive eruption at Novarupta on the Alaska Peninsula near King Salmon became one of the five largest eruptions in recorded history. It created the spectacular Katmai caldera and the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, which early explorers called the eighth wonder of the world. Preserved as a national monument in 1918, and now part of Katmai National Park, the eruption created an outdoor laboratory that has captivated scientists and sightseers alike for a century.

On April 25 at 7:30 p.m., Katmai expert Judy Fierstein will tell the story of those three dramatic days and what the 1912 eruption revealed about large explosive events. In “The Novarupta-Katmai Eruption of 1912 – Largest Eruption of the 20th Century: A Centennial Perspective,” Fierstein will explain how geologist “volcano detectives” examined the eruption’s aftermath. Fierstein will also explain how the eruption has remained scientifically important for 100 years and why Katmai still offers insights about the processes that shape our world.

Fierstein, a research geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, is known worldwide for her meticulous fieldwork on young, remote volcanoes in Alaska, the Cascades and the high Andes. She joined the USGS in 1980, just before the eruption of Mount St. Helens, and began working in Katmai soon after. Fierstein is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America and is known for engaging presentations about volcanoes and geologic fieldwork in wild places.

The free lecture will be held in the Boyd Room, Reichardt 201, at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Parking is available directly behind the building. This presentation is sponsored by the USGS, the National Park Service and the Alaska Historical Society

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Jessica Larsen, research associate professor, at 907-474-7992 or [email protected]. Amy Hartley, Geophysical Institute public relations manager, at 907-474-5823 or [email protected].

ON THE WEB:

www.gi.alaska.edu

www.avo.alaska.edu

SS/4-13-12/214-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On April - 14 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Photo courtesy of CNSM
Children participate in the 2011 Science Potpourri.

Kate Pendleton
907-474-7541
4/9/12

The University of Alaska Fairbanks College of Natural Science and Mathematics will host its annual Science Potpourri Saturday, April 14th, from noon to 3 p.m. at the Reichardt Building on the UAF campus.

The popular science event features dozens of hands-on science activities and demonstrations with UAF scientists and students. Participants can learn about molecules, examine fossils, touch sea creatures, make slime and much more.

The event is free and open to the public. For more information, including downloadable science experiments, visit http://www.uaf.edu/cnsm/science-potpourri/

MEDIA CONTACT: Marmian Grimes, UAF public information officer, at 907-474-7902 or via e-mail at [email protected].

ON THE WEB: http://www.uaf.edu/cnsm/science-potpourri/

MLG/4-9-12/206psa-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On April - 10 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Marie Gilbert
907-474-7412
3/23/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks will host the 2012 Jay Hammond Guest Lecture Thursday, March 29 at 3:45 p.m. in the Elvey Auditorium on the UAF campus.

This year’s speaker is Pierre Taberlet [pee-AIR TAB-er-lay] from the Laboratory of Alpine Ecology at the Joseph Fourier [FOUR-e-ay] University in France.

He will present a seminar on how DNA analysis applies to plant and animal conservation issues. He will also discuss new research on DNA barcoding as a means for assessing biodiversity.

The event is free and open to the public, but seating is limited. For more information, visit www.iab.uaf.edu/events. The Jay Hammond Guest Lecture is hosted by the UAF Institute of Arctic Biology and the UAF Department of Biology and Wildlife.

ON THE WEB: www.iab.uaf.edu/events

MEG/3-23-12/191-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On March - 24 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
2/22/12

What if your computer recognized you before you typed in your password? What if your computer knew what you looked at on its monitor? Computer scientists are working on technologies that can operate based on the information gathered from our eyes. Eye-tracking technologies have been around for 40 years, but are only now becoming affordable and powerful enough to come to a computer near you. New developments in eye-scanning could affect marketing, psychological studies, informational security and more.

On Feb. 28 at 7 p.m., Kenrick Mock and Bogdan Hoanca of the University of Alaska Anchorage will discuss their development of an improved eye-scanning system. Mock, associate professor of computer science, and Hoanca, professor of management information systems, will present “Protecting Our Eye-dentity: New Methods for Information Security” in the Westmark Gold Room. The lecture is the fifth installment in the 20th annual Science for Alaska Lecture Series.

Science for Alaska 2012 is sponsored by the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company. The series runs on Tuesdays through Mar. 6, 2012 and is free to the public.

Hands-on activities for all ages begin at 6:30 p.m. inside the Gold Room. Families are welcome.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Kenrick Mock, associate professor of computer science, UAA, at 907-786-1956 or [email protected]. Bogdan Hoanca, professor of management information systems, UAA, at 907-786-4140 or [email protected]. Amy Hartley, Geophysical Institute public relations manager, at 907-474-5823 or [email protected].

ON THE WEB: http://www.scienceforalaska.com

SS/2-22-12/170-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On February - 23 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Stevie Seibert
907-474-5229
2/15/12

Access to space has been slow and expensive. However, a new trend among research institutions encourages innovative ways to perform space exploration. Alaska is in a unique position for rocketry and satellite research. With two fully operational rocket ranges available and an advantageous geographic location, scientists are looking to the Far North to get instruments into space quickly and economically.

On Feb. 21 at 7 p.m., Bob McCoy will discuss the rocketry research opportunities in Alaska. McCoy, the director of the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, will present “Space Research from Alaska Spaceports” in the Westmark Gold Room. The lecture will be the fourth installment in the 20th annual Science for Alaska Lecture Series.

Science for Alaska 2012 is sponsored by the UAF Geophysical Institute and Alyeska Pipeline Service Company. The series runs on Tuesdays through Mar. 6, 2012 and is free to the public.

Hands-on activities for all ages begin at 6:30 p.m. inside the Gold Room. Families are welcome.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Bob McCoy, Geophysical Institute director, at 907-474-7282 or [email protected]. Amy Hartley, Geophysical Institute public relations manager, at 907-474-5823 or [email protected].

ON THE WEB: http://www.scienceforalaska.com

SS/2-15-12/160-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On February - 16 - 2012 ADD COMMENTS

Amy Hartley
907-474-5823
9/26/11

Located at the top of the globe, beneath the Arctic Ocean, the Amerasia Basin is poorly understood. This large depression in the ocean floor was created during the Mesozoic Era, the age of the dinosaurs, but how the tectonic plates shifted to open up and create the basin remains a puzzle. Professor Bernard Coakley and a 12-person crew currently aboard the research vessel Marcus G. Langseth hope to find the fossil plate boundaries associated with the basin and recreate the birth of this mysterious feature.

Coakley, a marine geologist with the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute and the College of Natural Science and Mathematics, is the chief scientist on the cruise. By email from the ship, Coakley explained how the crew is collecting seismic reflection data on the sedimentary make-up of the seafloor in a specific transect of the ocean. “We already have good information. If things continue as they have so far, we will be able to collect the complete grid I’ve laid out and probably have some time left for additional work.”

UAF undergraduates Emily Decker and Grant Cain and two UAF doctoral candidates, Ibrahim Ilhan and Melissa Johnson, are assisting Coakley on this project. UAF alumnus Dayton Dove is serving as the co-chief scientist on the cruise. The crew work 12-hour shifts and data collection is going well. Coakley said the crew is getting along marvelously, despite the close quarters and the repetitive nature of the work.

“‘Groundhog Day’ is a movie people cite for life onboard,” Coakley wrote. “The routine is the same every day. The things you do and when you do them don’t move around very much. Only the data change.”

The research cruise began when the ship, the Marcus G. Langseth, left Dutch Harbor, Alaska Sept. 6. It will run until Oct. 10. During the cruise, Coakley is posting frequent updates from the ship on The New York Times’ blog Scientist at Work. You can read Coakley’s posts at http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/author/bernard-coakley/.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Bernard Coakley, professor of marine geophysics, at 907-474-5385 or via email at [email protected].

AH/9-26-11/076-12

Posted by Marmian Grimes On September - 27 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Usibelli winners

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Winners of the 2011 Usibelli Awards are Roger Hansen, left for service, Vladimir Romanovsky for research, and Greg Owens for teaching.

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
4/3/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks has announced recipients of the 2011 Emil Usibelli Distinguished Teaching, Research and Public Service Awards.

Gregory Owens, associate professor of mathematics in the College of Rural and Community Development, received the teaching award; Vladimir Romanovsky, professor of geophysics in the College of Natural Science and Mathematics and the Geophysical Institute, received the research award; and Roger Hansen, research professor at the Geophysical Institute and state seismologist and director at the Alaska Earthquake Information Center, received the service award. All three were honored at a reception Monday at the UA Museum of the North.

Owens

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Associate Professor Greg Owens was awarded the 2011 Usibelli Award for Teaching. Owens teaches math in UAF's developmental education program within the College of Rural and Community Development.

Owens first joined UAF in 1987 as a developmental math instructor at Student Support Services. He is known for both the high expectations he has for his students and his unwavering support of them. Throughout his career, he has refined his teaching techniques to better serve his students and address their individual learning needs. The developmental math course he created has allowed dozens of students to receive credit-by-exam for a 100-level core math class. His work with these students has been so successful that the math department adopted some of his teaching strategies for the Math 107 course. In addition, he has been an instructor with UAF’s Rural Alaska Honors Institute, a summer college preparatory program for rural high school students, for more than two decades.

“It is his calling and his passion and the students who have benefited from his excellent skills and dedication are now contributing to engineering firms, businesses, schools, tribal organizations and other roles in small and large communities across the state and beyond,” said Sue McHenry, who nominated Owens. “Because he consistently challenges students to stretch themselves past what they may feel their limits are, he teaches more than mathematics, and he impacts how his students view themselves and even how they challenge their children to set goals.”

His skills as an educator are well documented in more than a dozen letters from former students. They cite not only his effectiveness in teaching mathematical concepts, but also his profound effect on their self-confidence, academically, professionally and personally.

“Throughout it all, I have never lost sight of my primary task,” Owens said. “I’m still striving to improve the success rates of students in my classes and their subsequent math courses, because the goal of developmental education is to prepare a capable and diligent lifetime student.”

Owens holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from the University of Wisconsin-Platteville and a master’s degree in cross-cultural education from UAF.

Romanovsky

UAF photo by Todd ParisProfessor Vladimir Romanovsky is the recipient of the 2011 Usibelli Award for Research. Romanovsky is a specialist in permafrost with UAF's Geophysical Institute and the Department of Geology and Geophysics.

Romanovsky is among the world leaders in permafrost research. He is consistently sought out as an expert in who can explain complicated concepts to both the public and media and is a frequent collaborator with colleagues in a variety of disciplines.

He began his career in 1975 at Moscow State University. In 1992, he came to UAF as a research assistant at the Geophysical Institute.

His research and collaborative work monitoring permafrost in northern latitudes has provided an important record of change in the Arctic and subarctic and has added to worldwide understanding of climate change. His work also offers valuable contributions to the state.

“The progressive destabilization of some soils, besides directly documenting change in mean annual air temperature, will have dramatic effects on the man-made infrastructure of the Interior,” wrote geology and geophysics department chairman Bernard Oakley in his nomination letter. “Vlad’s work contributes directly to our ability to plan and effectively remediate effects on roads and buildings that are being compromised by the changing climate and plan future construction to minimize these impacts.”

As part of his research work during the last five years, Romanovsky has mentored 22 students and nine postdoctoral researchers and has been listed on more the $10 million in research grants, many of them with an interdisciplinary focus. He also teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses and incorporates his interdisciplinary philosophy into his teaching and service work.

“We are actively collaborating with biologists, soil scientists, hydrologists, biogeochemists, marine scientists, remote sensing scientists and others to promote the system science approach in developing a better understanding of the Arctic,” Romanovsky said.

Romanovsky holds master’s degrees in mathematics and geophysics and a doctorate in geology from Moscow State University and a doctorate in geophysics from UAF.

Hansen

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Professor Roger Hansen is the recipient of the 2011 Usibelli Award for Service. Hansen is Alaska State Seismologist and teaches seismology with UAF's Geophysical Institute.

Hansen is credited as one of the driving forces behind improved earthquake reporting in Alaska. He began his career in the 1970s and served in a variety of positions at public and private organizations in the U.S. and Norway. He came to UAF in 1994.

“At the time, there was little effort made to report information outside the research community,” Hansen said, noting that current practice is quite different. “Response agencies receive critical information about damaging earthquakes in minutes, if not second, via web pages, email, text messages, and fax and telephone. Additionally, using our tsunami modeling capabilities, we are distributing information for the development of evacuation routes and safe zones throughout Alaska’s vulnerable coastal communities.”

Hansen’s outreach and public information efforts cover a wide swath of the population, from public and school tours of his facility, to informational pamphlets and electronic media, to teacher education, to public lectures and media interviews. He serves on multiple public emergency-planning and hazard-mitigation committees and is frequently consulted as an expert in his field. In addition to his public service, he is active on a variety of university committees, all while continuing his own research activities and mentoring graduate students.

Alaska’s seismic observatory is the busiest in the nation, said Geophysical Institute director Roger Smith, who nominated Hansen for the award.

“The measures of success of the observatory are precision of the data, the accuracy of calculations and reliability of the reports,” Smith said. “Under the leadership of Dr. Roger Hansen, the Alaska Earthquake Information Center strives for excellence in these areas and provides outstanding service to the state, nation and the seismological profession.”

Hansen holds bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of California, Berkeley.

The Emil Usibelli Distinguished Teaching, Research and Public Service Awards are considered one of the university’s most prestigious awards. They represent UAF’s tripartite mission and are funded annually from a $600,000 endowment established by Usibelli Coal Mine in 1992.

Each year, a committee that includes members from the faculty, the student body and a member of the UA Foundation Board of Trustees evaluates the nominees. Each of the winners receives a cash award of $10,000.

NOTE TO EDITORS: Photos of the recipients are available online at www.uafnews.com.

MG/5-3-11/220-11

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 3 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

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