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GEAT Seminar Fall 2017: Dr. Howie Scher September 19

Author: awood | Image: awood

The GEAT department is pleased to welcome Dr. Howie Scher, University of South Carolina, as our next seminar speaker.

Title: Chasing Ice through Space and Time – Reconstructing Polar Ice Sheets through the Cenozoic using the Marine Sediment Record

When: Tuesday, September 19 @ 4:10 pm
Where: 2050 Agronomy Hall

Bio: Dr. Scher is an associated professor in the School of the Earth, Ocean, and Environment at the University of South Carolina. He received his Ph.D. in Geological Sciences from the University of Florida and was an IMAS postdoctoral scholar at UC Santa Cruz. Howie participated as a shipboard scientist on two IODP Expeditions (Expeditions 320 and 342).

Abstract: Large ice sheets at both poles may be the namesakes for the present-day climate state – the icehouse – however, our understanding of when these massive accumulations of ice first appeared is far from complete. The continental crust beneath the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets is ancient, and processes of glacial weathering contribute distinct and easily recognizable isotopic fingerprints from these sources to the ocean. Dr. Scher has used radiogenic isotopes in the sedimentary record from the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica to figure out the timing of major glacial weathering pulses. He will present evidence that precursor glaciations preceded the widespread development of ice sheets on Antarctica. He will also present new results from the North Atlantic (Expedition 342, Newfoundland drifts) that indicate an episode of glacial weathering on Greenland in the earliest Oligocene. The paradox implied by these results – that there was continental ice in the northern hemisphere when carbon dioxide levels were above the bipolar glaciation threshold – may be resolved in the future with a better understanding of past carbon dioxide levels and paleo-elevation in the Northern Hemisphere.