UTIG’s Gail Christeson talked to EOS about her latest study, which found how the age and spreading speed of ocean crust determine its thickness, porosity and other characteristics. Python and Jupyter notebooks, increasingly important tools for geophysicists, also played a role in the study. Read the full interview on the EOS website. Continue Reading Ask UTIG: Why Age and Speed Matter for New Oceanic Crust
UT Study Shows How To Produce Natural Gas While Storing Carbon Dioxide
New research at The University of Texas at Austin shows that injecting air and carbon dioxide into methane ice deposits buried beneath the Gulf of Mexico could unlock vast natural gas energy resources while helping fight climate change by trapping the carbon dioxide underground. The study, published May 26 in the journal Water Resources Research,… Continue Reading UT Study Shows How To Produce Natural Gas While Storing Carbon Dioxide
Meet The Exploration Geophysics Trailblazers: Part 3
In March this year, students from the University of Texas Jackson School of Geosciences presented research at the annual meeting of the UT-Austin EDGER Forum, an industry consortium that sponsors education and research in exploration geophysics. Research carried out by the group spans laboratory experiments, numerical simulations and field data analysis, a combination that is… Continue Reading Meet The Exploration Geophysics Trailblazers: Part 3
Meet The Exploration Geophysics Trailblazers: Part 2
In March this year, students from the University of Texas Jackson School of Geosciences presented research at the annual meeting of the UT-Austin EDGER Forum, an industry consortium that sponsors education and research in exploration geophysics. Research carried out by the group spans laboratory experiments, numerical simulations and field data analysis, a combination that is… Continue Reading Meet The Exploration Geophysics Trailblazers: Part 2
Massive Martian Ice Discovery Opens a Window into Red Planet’s History
Newly discovered layers of ice buried a mile beneath Mars’ north pole are the remnants of ancient polar ice sheets and could be one of the largest water reservoirs on the planet, according to scientists at The University of Texas at Austin and the University of Arizona. The team made the discovery using measurements gathered… Continue Reading Massive Martian Ice Discovery Opens a Window into Red Planet’s History
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