Search the GSW Database

Search for
Year
Search for
Person
Search for
text in title
List of
Best Papers
List of
Presidential Addresses

31 talks found:

(Click on mtg# for details and minutes)

Rec Mtg# Year Authors Institution Talk title
1 1336 2001 Margaret Leinen National Science Foundation Geoscience in the 21st century: The best is yet to come.
2 1336 2001 Frank Pazzaglia Lehigh University Evolution of the Appalachian landscape: new insights from geomorphology and thermochronology.
3 1336 2001 Ho-Kwang (David) Mao Geophysical Laboratory High pressure -- A new dimension in studies of Earth and planetary interiors.
4 1337 2001 Milan J. Pavich USGS Cows, Climate and Chaos: Challenges to Interpreting Southwestern Landscapes.
5 1337 2001 James Rougvie National Museum of Natural History Cathodoluminescence records of Low-T K-metasomatism: Socorro, Creede, and Harcuvar Mountains.
6 1337 2001 P. Patrick Leahy USGS Future Roles and Opportunities for Geology at the USGS.
7 1338 2001 James S. Beard Virginia Museum of Natural History Minerals of the Hutter Mine.
8 1338 2001 Ken Livi Johns Hopkins University Low-grade metamorphism of clastic sediments: Can equilibrium thermodynamics be applied?
9 1338 2001 Yumei Wang Office of Sen. Edward Kennedy Earthquakes: What's shaking? (2nd Best Paper 2001)
10 1339 2001 Herman Zimmerman National Science Foundation New directions for the Earth sciences.
11 1339 2001 Steven Lev Towson State University Solving the mystery of the dead cat: Using geochemistry to a provide a context for understanding complex geologic systems.
12 1339 2001 Roberta Rudnick University of Maryland Osmium isotopic investigations of continental lithospheric stability.
13 1340 2001 Paul G. Silver Department of Terrestrial Magnetism Which way is the mantle flowing beneath western North America? Constraints from GPS and seismic anisotropy.
14 1340 2001 Eileen McLellan Will & Carlson, Inc. The science and policy of watershed management.
15 1340 2001 Robert Finch Argonne National Laboratory Mineralogy and geochemistry of waste-form corrosion: Some issues for a high-level waste repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada.
16 1341 2001 Neil Pederson Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Trees rock! The value of tree-ring research in studying Earth and environmental history.
17 1341 2001 George Hornberger University of Virginia Variation of the chemical composition of stream waters with discharge in Shenandoah National Park.
18 1341 2001 David Menzie USGS Changing patterns of mineral consumption: Some implications for sustainability.
19 1342 2001 Lucy Flesch State University of New York, Stony Brook Dynamics and kinematics of the western North American plate boundary zone.
20 1342 2001 Thomas Zack University of Maryland What does subducted crust really look like? A rare glimpse from a new lawsonite-eclogite find in the Dominican Republic.
21 1342 2001 Wallace S. Broecker Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory The big climate amplifier: ocean circulation-sea ice extent-storminess-dustiness-cloud albedo.
22 1343 2001 Sidney Hemming Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Chronology of the Wilson Creek Formation, Mono Lake CA, and implications for global correlations in the late Quaternary.
23 1343 2001 A. Hope Jahren Johns Hopkins University What can fossil plants tell us about the carbon cycle?
24 1343 2001 N. Gary Hemming Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory What boron isotopes in cultured corals tell us about temperature and pCO2 in the ocean.
  1344 2001     Canceled for 9/11
25 1345 2001 Richard S. Fiske;
  et al.
National Museum of Natural History Kulanaokuaiki 3 tephra: Kilauea Volcano's nasty little secret. (Best Paper 2001)
26 1345 2001 David Applegate;
  Peter F. Folger
American Geological Institute/Americal Geophysical Union Building congressional concern for natural hazards.
27 1345 2001 John R. Filson USGS Real-time seismology.
28 1346 2001 S. Julio Friedmann University of Maryland Carbon sequestration and oilfield injection at Teapot Dome, Wyoming.
29 1346 2001 Jun Abrajano Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Carbonisotope discrimination of organic contaminant sources in sediments.
30 1346 2001 Alberto Saal Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Pb isotopes in melt inclusions from oceanic basalts.
31 1347 2001 Peter T. Lyttle USGS The geologic map -- a two hundred year evolution. (Presidential Address)

Peter T. Lyttle was President in 2001
Nicholas B. Woodward was 1st VP in 2001
Sandra Neuzil was 2nd VP in 2001
Rama K. Kotra was Treasurer in 2001
John Hanchar was Meeting Secy in 2001
Mark McBride was Council Secy in 2001
Cyril J. Galvin was on the Council in 2001
John Stephen Huebner was on the Council in 2001
Allan Kolker was on the Council in 2001
M. Amelia Logan was on the Council in 2001
Nathalie Marchildon was on the Council in 2001
Suzanne D. Weedman was on the Council in 2001
Paul B. Tomascak was Chair of the Program Committee in 2001
Jane Marie Hammarstrom was Chair of the Awards Committee in 2001
Leslie F. Ruppert was Chair of the Membership Committee in 2001
David Applegate was Chair of the Nominating Committee in 2001
J. R. Keith was Chair of the Sleeping Bear Committee in 2001
Nicholas B. Woodward was Chair of the Finance Committee in 2001
Gordon L. Nord Jr. was Chair of the Public srvc Committee in 2001
Richard S. Fiske won the Best Paper Award in 2001
Yumei Wang won the 2nd best paper Award in 2001
Douglas W. Rankin won the Sleeping Bear Award in 2001
Motoaki Sato was the Grand Inquisitor of 2001