New NSF Grant!

I am very excited to have received NSF funding for a 3-year P2C2 project entitled “Glacial deep Pacific carbon storage and effects on CaCO3 preservation.” This work is a collaborative project with Dr. Kassandra Costa at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution with Middlebury College as the lead institution.

Modified from the proposal abstract: The oceans are threatened by climate change, and understanding how they will respond to higher CO2 levels has never been more important. Past changes in the ocean’s carbon cycle can provide data to check and improve models that help us predict future changes. These data can also help us ‘balance’ Earth’s carbon budget by showing where and how much carbon was stored in the ocean at times when the Earth has been much colder.

This research includes roles and funding for undergraduate and graduate students and increases access to information about climate change by creating activities for high school classrooms (partnership with Middlebury Union High School). This work thus advances discovery, integrates research and education, increases the participation of underrepresented groups in the geosciences, and fosters the inclusion of the public in fundamental science research.

The project is jointly funded by OCE-Marine Geology and Geophysics (OCE-MGG) and the Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR).

New Job!

I am absolutely thrilled to have accepted a position with Middlebury College's Geology Department for the 2020-2021 academic year. The current plan (COVID-willing) is for me to teach Elements of Oceanography (with lab) in the fall of 2020, and How to Build a Habitable Planet, and Earth’s Climate History (with lab) in spring of 2021.

If you are a Middlebury student interested in doing paleoclimate research with me (semester or summer) please do not hesitate to get in touch (ajacobel<at>middlebury.edu)!

Cheers,

Allison

International Conference on Paleoceanography

Next week I'll be visiting Utrecht in the Netherlands for a week-long conference on paleoceanography. I'll be presenting a new record of dust flux to the central equatorial Pacific spanning 350 kyr and covering the last four glacial terminations. I'm very excited to share my work and to get a little preview of all the research papers I'll be reading next year!

-Allison

International Conference on Paleoceanography

AGU Outstanding Student Paper Award

The American Geophysical Union has just announced the winners of their Outstanding Student Paper Awards for the 2015 Fall Meeting and I am delighted to be among the three Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology winners. Congratulations to the other awardees and many thanks to the organizing committee and judges for making the competition possible!

https://eos.org/agu-news/outstanding-student-paper-awards-3

 

Back to School

It's time to go back to school here at Columbia! Lamont is starting to come back to life with new undergraduate students, grad students and even a few postdocs.  I'm starting my own search for a postdoc and beginning to think about applying for the NOAA and NSF fellowships.  If you know of other opportunities that might be a good fit, please let me know!

I'm going to be presenting a bunch of science this fall, starting in just one week (eek)!  It's a workshop on Monsoons and the ITCZ that's being held at Columbia on the Morningside campus. I'll be presenting a poster on Tuesday 9/15, but don't worry I'll post it here too when it's complete.

I'm also anticipating trips to Baltimore for GSA in November to give a poster, receive an award and support my summer intern as she presents a poster on our G. ruber work. I'll be visiting Boston and Woods Hole (also in November) for the Graduate Climate Conference and am also making the annual migration to AGU in December.  Hope to catch up with you along the way.

Cheers,

Allison

Summer Intern Presentations

Yesterday the Lamont-Doherty Summer Interns presented their summer research projects during a poster session in Comer. We were fortunate to have two interns working with the McManus Lab Group this summer, Sarah McGrath from The College of Wooster and Danielle Schimmenti from Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and and Atmospheric Science.

Over the last 10 weeks Sarah and I have worked together on a project evaluating two chromotypes of the planktonic foraminifera G. ruber using geochemical techniques. The forams were analyzed for stable oxygen and carbon isotopes, radiocarbon ages and trace element ratios. Click here for more information on our project.

Allison