document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2034&skinNameSticky=default">Protecting the World from the Next Great Earthquake</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           The 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake and resulting tsunami     are now infamous for the damage they caused, but at the time     many scientists believed this area was unlikely to create a     quake of such magnitude. In the March 23 issue of the journal     Science, geophysicist Robert McCaffrey urges the     public and policy makers to consider all subduction-type     tectonic boundaries to be &ldquo;locked, loaded, and dangerous.&rdquo;        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1971&skinNameSticky=default">Geologists Reveal Secrets Behind Supervolcano Eruption</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Rensselaer researchers have discovered what likely triggered     the eruption of a &ldquo;supervolcano&rdquo; that coated much of the     western half of the United States with ash fallout 760,000     years ago. Using a new technique developed at Rensselaer, the     team determined that there was a massive injection of hot magma     underneath the surface of what is now the Long Valley Caldera     in California some time within 100 years of the gigantic     volcano&rsquo;s eruption.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1963&skinNameSticky=default">Naked Science: Stone Age Apocalypse</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Professor Robert McCaffrey and Research Associate Professor David Wark, of Renssleaer\'s Earth and Environmental Science department, will be featured on the National Geographic Channel\'s Naked Science program this week.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1914&skinNameSticky=default">Frank Spear Elected as Fellow of the American Geophysical Union</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(February 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           Frank Spear, department chair and professor of earth and     environmental sciences, has been elected as a fellow of the     American Geophysical Union (AGU). This prestigious honor is     limited to no more than 0.1 percent of the AGU&rsquo;s total     membership each year.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1880&skinNameSticky=default">Spear awarded AGU Fellowship</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2007)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Frank Spear, department chair and professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences, has been elected as a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1730&skinNameSticky=default">Earth and Environmental Sciences Faculty Awarded Grants</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">           The Office of Research has announced the Earth and     Environmental Science r esearch awards for April, May, and June     2006.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1636&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Honors Renowned Geologist Ebenezer Emmons</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       A plaque honoring Ebenezer Emmons, Class of 1826, a renowned     geologist and the Institute&rsquo;s first professor of geology, was     unveiled during a ceremony that took place on the Rensselaer     campus in April.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1620&skinNameSticky=default">School of Science Research Awards for February and March &#8217;06</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(June 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Office of Research announced the research awards     ($50,000 and above) for February and March \'06. School of     Science awards include:        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1576&skinNameSticky=default">Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Bestows Awards</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       The Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences has bestowed the following awards and honors.     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1450&skinNameSticky=default">Ebenezer Emmons Plaque to be Unveiled</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       A plaque honoring Ebenezer Emmons, class of 1826, will be     unveiled in a ceremony on Thursday, April 27. Emmons named both     the Adirondack and Taconic Mountains , and was the single     individual principally responsible for the transformation of     American geology. Through him New York State became the model     and standard for the stratigraphic surveys of much of the rest     of the United States.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://www.geotimes.org/current/profiles.html">Gerald Friedman: Sediment Historian</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2006)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Gerald M. Friedman is a man of lists. The sedimentary geologist and earth sciences historian can name the state geologists who were trained by geologist Amos Eaton, founder and first professor of the Rensselaer School in 1824 (almost two dozen); the places he himself visited in 1975, for example, to teach courses on sedimentary geology (at least two dozen); and the number of students he has taught over his career (more than four dozen doctoral students alone). [Geotimes]     </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1258&skinNameSticky=default">Rensselaer Earth Research Featured at AGU Fall Meeting in San Francisco</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(December 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Sixteen Rensselaer researchers presented results, ranging     from imaging earthquake activity at the San Andreas Fault to     exploring life in extreme environments, at the 2005 American     Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting Dec. 5-9 in San     Francisco.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1206&skinNameSticky=default">Gerald Friedman Wins Legendary Geoscientist Award and the Mary C. Rabbit Memorial Medal</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Gerald Friedman, Professor Emeritus of Earth and     Environmental Sciences, was recently awarded two distinguished     awards: the 2005 Legendary Geoscientist Award and the Mary C.     Rabbit Memorial Medal for 2005.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=1003&skinNameSticky=default">Don Anderson &#8217;55 Selected for Rensselaer&#8217;s Alumni Hall of Fame</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(August 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Don L. Anderson received his B.S. in Geology and Geophysics     from Rensselaer in 1955. Come September, this deep-Earth     researcher will be inducted into Rensselaer\'s Alumni Hall of     Fame.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://www.ferc.gov/careers/car-prof/wm-eng-spring-05.pdf">Government Careers are Worth Investigating</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Diana Heitzman, \'80 \'81, is profiled in "Woman Engineer"     about her job as an environmental program specialist for the     New York State Department of Environmental Conservation     Division of Water.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=818&skinNameSticky=default">New Thermometer Reveals Wet Conditions on Earliest Earth</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Researchers at Rensselaer and Australian National University     have found new evidence that environmental conditions on early     Earth, within 200 million years of solar system formation, were     characterized by liquid-water oceans and continental crust     similar to those of the present day. The researchers developed     a new thermometer that made the discovery possible.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=720&skinNameSticky=default">New Thermometer Reveals Wet Conditions on Earliest Earth</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(May 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and     Australian National University have found new evidence that     environmental conditions on early Earth, within 200 million     years of solar system formation, were characterized by     liquid-water oceans and continental crust similar to those of     the present day. The researchers developed a new thermometer     that made the discovery possible.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=840&skinNameSticky=default">Indonesian Earthquake Research at Rensselaer</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(January 2005)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       When the devastating earthquake and tsunami struck in South     Asia on Dec. 26, Rensselaer professor Rob McCaffrey watched the     story unfold with knowing concern. For 25 years the geophysics     professor has been monitoring earthquake activity and plate     convergence at subduction zones in Indonesia, including the     Sumatra subduction zone where the recent magnitude 9 earthquake     occurred.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=601&skinNameSticky=default">Indonesian Earthquake Research at Rensselaer</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(December 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Dr. Rob McCaffrey, a geophysics professor at Rensselaer     Polytechnic Institute, has been monitoring earthquake activity     and plate convergence at subduction zones in Indonesia,     including the Sumatra subduction zone where the recent     magnitude 9 earthquake occurred, and other regions for 25     years.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=590&skinNameSticky=default">Discovery of Juvenile Zebra Mussels in Lake George</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(November 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       On Nov. 4, 2004, researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic     Institute&rsquo;s Darrin Fresh Water Institute (DFWI) found three     settled juvenile zebra mussels on plates that were removed from     the Ticonderoga Boat Launch Site.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=565&skinNameSticky=default">Beneath the Antarctic</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(October 2004)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Anahita Tikku, a research scientist in the Department of     Earth and Environmental Sciences at Rensselaer, and scientists     from the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia     University have developed the first map of water depth in Lake     Vostok, which lies between 3,700 and 4,300 meters (more than     two miles) below the continental Antarctic ice sheet and is     roughly the size of Lake Ontario.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=302&skinNameSticky=default">Studying the Mighty Hudson</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2003)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       New York Governor George Pataki announced in April 2003 that     Rensselaer will manage the Upper Hudson Research, Education,     and Outreach Satellite Center that will be part of the Rivers     &amp; Estuaries Center on the Hudson River &mdash; a world-class     institute for the study of rivers and estuaries.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=245&skinNameSticky=default">Noah&#8217;s Flood Hypothesis May Not Hold Water</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(September 2002)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       In 1996, marine geologists William Ryan and Walter Pitman     published a scientifically popular &ldquo;Noah&rsquo;s Flood Hypothesis.&rdquo;     The researchers presented evidence of a bursting flood about     7,500 years ago in what is now the Black Sea. But, such a     forceful flood could not have taken place, says Jun Abrajano,     professor of earth and environmental sciences at Rensselaer. He     is part of an international team of scientists who refute the     so-called Noah&rsquo;s Flood Hypothesis.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=303&skinNameSticky=default">Slowly, Some Adirondack Lakes Recover</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2002)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       Over the years, acid deposition, commonly referred to as     &ldquo;acid rain,&rdquo; has rendered dozens of lakes in the Adirondacks     uninhabitable for fish and other wildlife. Now, researchers at     Rensselaer&rsquo;s Margaret A. and David M. Darrin &rsquo;40 Fresh Water     Institute indicate that some of the most severely affected     lakes in that region are showing signs of recovery.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');document.writeln('<p>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwHeading"><a href="http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=246&skinNameSticky=default">Journey to the Center of the Earth</a></span>');document.writeln('    <span class="caption">(March 2000)</span><br/>');document.writeln('    <span class="lwSummary">       E. Bruce Watson, Institute Professor of Science in the     Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, passed among     his students a fist-sized chunk of granite flecked with     crystals of pink, white, and black.        </span>');document.writeln('</p>');