Gliding into St. Thomas

This week Rutgers University Center for Ocean Observing Leadership (RUCOOL) Assistant Professor Dr. Travis Miles and PhD Student Joe Gradone deployed RU36, the newest addition to our glider fleet, off St. Thomas. This glider will be measuring temperature, salinity, oxygen, and subsurface currents in the passage way between St. Thomas...

Congratulations to Elizabeth Sikes

Congratulations to Elizabeth Sikes who has been elected to the position of Vice president of the Geochemical Society. The position of vice president is an executive position on the governing board of the Society.  She will be promoted to President in 2024. The Geochemical Society has nearly 4,000 members from...

Antarctic Long-Term Ecological Research site turns 30

The Long-Term Ecological Research site at Palmer Station, Antarctica, celebrates its 30th field season this year. Thanks to this long-running research program, scientists have consistently tracked environmental changes taking place along the Antarctic Peninsula, one of the fastest-warming regions on Earth, over the past several decades. Researchers have also seen...

Sam Coakley is a Master!

Congratulations to RUCOOL grad student Sam Coakley on successfully completing his Masters defense entitled “The evolution of a stratified upper ocean under tropical cyclone forcing.” Sam will be moving on to work at the US Climate Variability and Predictability Program. Well done Sam, and we wish you the best of...

Rutgers Unveils New Palmer LTER Website

The National Science Foundation has funded RUCOOL to update their Palmer Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Website. The Palmer LTER study area is located to the west of the Antarctic Peninsula extending South and North of the Palmer Basin from onshore to several hundred kilometers off shore. Palmer Station is one...

New Event from Rutgers DEI Committee

The DMCS Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Committee is hosting a panel discussion on experiences of underrepresented minorities in education and academia. This event invites Rutgers faculty who specialize in ethnic studies to provide context and insight into the relationship between identity and higher education while also reflecting on their own...

EXCTING SCIENCE findings by the Rutgers Astrobiology Team

EXCTING SCIENCE findings by the Rutgers Astrobiology Team.  Life is a special, very complex form of motion of matter, but this form did not always exist, and it is not separated from inorganic nature by an impassable abyss; rather, it arose from inorganic nature as a new property in the process...