A documentary film about a Juneau Icefield expedition by Earth Sciences major Caroline Wexler was accepted by the 2023 International Polar Film Festival! Click here to view the film Click here for a synopsis of the film Caroline will be talking at a roundtable discussion about the documentary with other accepted filmmakers for the 2023 […]
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Earth Blog #5: Earth Environmentalism: Synonym or Euphemism?
For me, the first week of fall semester 2021 culminated with a UConn Today feature article by Elaina Hancock titled: “Rx for Humanity: Whole Earth Environmentalism.” The article’s subtitle “Whole Earth Environmentalism is mine. It popped out accidentally when I was trying to describe what Earth System Science was to an outsider who wasn’t getting […]
REVIEW — Books: The Story of Stardust
By Dr. Robert Thorson Meteorite By Tim Gregory Basic, 299 pages, $30 Struck with cosmic awe on the rocky, windswept summit of Maine’s Mount Katahdin, Henry David Thoreau asked in 1846: “Who are we? Where are we?” Nearly two centuries later, British geologist Tim Gregory offers the best scientific answer I’ve yet found in his […]
Appreciating Subtlety, But Longing for Fireworks
#27. Originally published in Hartford Courant by Robert Thorson on October 7, 2004, p. A11. (Mt. St. Helens and the presidential debates). Teaching respect for nature’s power is the most important challenge facing science educators today. This is fairly easy to achieve when volcanic eruptions offer dramatic images that outmatch even a Hollywood spectacle. […]
Tsunami Warning System Could Have Saved Lives
#39 Originally published in Hartford Courant by Robert Thorson on December 30, 2004, p. A9 (on the Indian Ocean tsunami). The death toll from the Sumatran tsunami will probably exceed 50,000. Regrettably, most of those drowned at sea died needlessly, either because they were not adequately warned or because they couldn’t interpret the sea’s strange behavior. […]
When Fans Really Rock
#200. Originally published in Hartford Courant by Robert Thorson on Feb 28, 2008, p. A13, (on global soccer matches picked up by seismometers in Africa). Leap-frogging I understand. Leap-yearing I do not, unless it involves seismic tremors created by humans. I get the concept of adding an extra day to the calendar every four years. […]
Don’t Mess with Nature
By Dr. Robert Thorson How can I use it? Will it harm me? These two basic questions lie beneath all land-use decisions. Humans live wherever the benefits of using the land for habitat, resources or disposal outweigh the risk of being harmed by the land. This is smart. But there are three problems associated with […]
Tapping Into Earth Power
#148. Originally published in Hartford Courant by Robert Thorson on February 1, 2007, p. A9 (on the importance of geothermal energy development). There’s a change blowing in the wind of U.S. energy policy. It’s blowing up from below. Think steam. On Jan. 22, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology released a blockbuster report titled […]
Mountain in Motion
#100. Originally published in Hartford Courant by Robert Thorson on March 2, 2006, p. A11 (on deadly lahars in the Philippines). Ignorance is bliss … until it kills you. Lahar. What is it? What does it mean? It meant death to the Philippine village of Guinsaugon, where 206 children were buried alive in their […]
Yellowstone – Just the Tip of the Volcano
#222. Originally published in Hartford Courant by Robert Thorson on Jan 15, 2009, p. A15, (on news that isn’t news and reverence for Earth). ‘Where are we going to go when the volcano blows?” That lyric by singer Jim Croce was playing in the background when I was being introduced on WTIC radio during […]