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  • Where does the Grand Canyon’s water come from?

Research in the News

Where does the Grand Canyon’s water come from?

Posted by SiteSteward on February 29, 2020

School of Earth & Sustainability hydrologists Natalie Jones and Abe Springer have been researching the origins of Grand Canyon spring water. Read more at: NAU grad student looking for clues in the mystery of the Grand Canyon’s water supply (NAU News), Searching For Grand Canyon National Park’s Water Source (KJZZ), and Tracking the Grand Canyon’s Mysterious Springs (Eos).

Filed Under: Research in the News, Water Research

What past warming events can tell us about current climate change

Posted by SiteSteward on January 22, 2020

Tune in to hear NAU Geologist Michael Smith talk to KJZZ’s The Show about past and future climate variation. Michael explains how detailed records from warm periods in the past (from the NSF-funded Green River Eocene Earth and Climate Observatory project) could help us to predict the where and when of current and… Read more

Filed Under: Past & Present Climate Change, Research in the News, Sedimentary Geology

What plants move the fastest in response to a changing climate?

Posted by SiteSteward on August 13, 2019

NAU faculty in Biological Sciences and the School of Earth and Sustainability have recently published research showing that plant traits such as plant height and dispersal ability have impacted their ability to move across the landscape in response to 10,000 years of changing climate conditions. How can we know this about the past? Packrat middens! Read the NAU News story or… Read more

Filed Under: Publications, Research in the News

Recent global warming outpaces climate changes of the past 2,000 years

Posted by SiteSteward on August 10, 2019

SES researchers Michael Erb, Nick McKay, and Darrell Kaufman are part of a global effort to bring together all possible data about past climate variability, providing a better baseline to evaluate recent anthropogenic change. Their latest work in Nature Geoscience shows that no matter how you look at it, our current actions are causing exceptionally rapid change. Read the story in NAU News or jump straight to the paper.

Filed Under: Featured, Past & Present Climate Change, Publications, Research in the News

Research Scientist Matt Johnson explains the tension between introduced beetles and endangered birds

Posted by SiteSteward on

Intentionally introduced tamarisk beetles do a great job of beating back invasive tamarisk along Arizona’s rivers, but what does this mean for the habitat available to endangered flycatchers? Matt Johnson explains the need for follow-up plantings of native trees and shrubs to fill the hole left by the beetles. Read the AP story here.

Filed Under: Research in the News

NAU geology team joins multidisciplinary study to investigate ancient warming event

Posted by SiteSteward on April 17, 2019

School of Earth & Sustainability professor Mike Smith is studying past climate warming to learn about the future. Smith is part of a new multidisciplinary study involving eight institutions and a multimillion-dollar National Science Foundation grant. Read more at NAU News.

Filed Under: Research in the News, Sedimentary Geology

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School of Earth & Sustainability
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Room A108 Building 11
Ashurst
624 S Knoles Dr
Flagstaff, AZ 86011
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928-523-9333
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