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Evidence Piling Up for Coastal Migration Route A few summers ago, archaeologist Joanne McSporran saw a sharp black rock in a pile of gravel pulled from the seafloor off British Columbia
The Alaska-Siberia Telegraph | Geophysical Institute The plan for the Alaska-Siberia Telegraph was originated by Perry McDonough Collins, while undertaking a commercial venture in the Amur Valley of Siberia Collins envisioned an intercontinental telegraph link from California, north through British Columbia, across Russian America to Siberia, via the Bering Strait, and across Siberia to Europe
Meet graduate student researcher Sebin John - Geophysical Institute Graduate student researchers are the future of science and an integral part of our Geophysical Institute family So let’s meet some of them Here’s Sebin John from the GI’s Seismology and Geodesy Research Group His advisor is research professor Mike West, director of the Alaska Earthquake Center Q: Where are you from? Tell us about that place
Red Aurora | Geophysical Institute Early on the morning of December 19, 1980, a blood-red auroral arc suddenly appeared in the skies over British Columbia, Yukon Territory and Alaska
Where the Oils Going---and Why | Geophysical Institute The current begins with the heavy precipitation in British Columbia and southeastern Alaska As the freshwater runoff discharges into the sea, the effect of the earth's rotation turns it to the right It flows northward along Southeast's coast, gathering more fresh water as it goes
Growing California Glaciers and Carbon Calculations To get a perspective on the size of Mt Shasta’s glaciers, an Alaska scientist at the meeting figured all the ice on Mt Shasta equals about what Alaska’s Columbia Glacier calves into the ocean every two or three days
American robins not heading north quite yet | Geophysical Institute Oliver’s research is part of a NASA project headed by Columbia professor and Toolik Field Station regular Natalie Boelman Researchers are trying to learn how a warmer world affects bears, caribou, wolves, songbirds, and other animals One of Oliver’s major questions is how robins are adjusting to earlier springs
The loneliest volcano in Alaska | Geophysical Institute This band of dormant volcanoes extends from central British Columbia all the way up to the Yukon Territory and Prindle in Alaska Russell and Edwards think Prindle and other volcanoes in the group formed differently than Alaska’s active volcanoes, which sit above the subduction zone where the massive Pacific Plate is grinding beneath the
The recent fall of the upper Yukon River | Geophysical Institute Further investigation by Dan Shugar and two colleagues from Illinois and British Columbia made them believe they were catching river piracy in the act River piracy happens when one large drainage somehow steals the water of another