[Eoas-seminar] Darcy Lecture tomorrow (Friday, 9/22/2023)
eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu
eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu
Thu Sep 21 10:14:17 EDT 2023
Dear All,
This is a reminder of the EOAS seminar tomorrow (Friday, 9/22). Please join us for the Darcy Lecture (https://www.ngwa.org/events-and-education/groundwater-lecture-series/current-darcy-lecturer) sponsored by the National Ground Water Association. The lecturer is Professor Alicia Wilson in the School of Earth, Ocean, and Environment at the University of South Carolina. Below are the details of the lecture. Note that you can attend the lecture via zoom at the link https://fsu.zoom.us/j/97470125315. Should you have any questions, please contact the local host, Professor Ming Ye, at mye at fsu.edu.
Date: Friday, September 22, 2023
Time: 3 - 4pm
Location: EOAS 1050 (Speaker in person)
Zoom Link: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/97470125315
Speaker: Professor Alicia Wilson
Lecture 1 — Subseafloor Hydrogeology: Moving Beyond Watersheds
The field of submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) was launched in the 1990s by the remarkable discovery, via naturally occurring isotopic tracers, that saline groundwater was discharging to the South Atlantic Bight in very large volumes. Subsequent studies confirmed that saline groundwater discharges to the Atlantic Ocean in volumes that rival river discharge. All available evidence indicates that this saline groundwater is highly enriched in nutrients compared to river water, so the nutrient contributions of this submarine discharge exceed that of river discharge. These findings have been slow to find widespread acceptance, however, because it has been exceedingly difficult to confirm this flow by means other than the original isotropic tracers. This discharge does not occur near the shoreline, and no conceptual models for SGD far from shore existed.
This changed recently when new studies using heat as a tracer identified clear pulses of groundwater discharge 10-15 km offshore in the South Atlantic Bight. This talk investigates this 20-year mystery and the recent discoveries that suggest that it may be time to rewrite chemical budgets for the coastal ocean.
Look forward to seeing you at the lecture!
--------------
Ming Ye, Ph.D.
Professor in Hydrogeology
Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science
Office: 3015 EOAS Building (1011 Academic Way)
Phone: 850-645-4987
Department of Scientific Computing
Office: 489 Dirac Science Library
Phone: 850-644-4587
Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306-4520
Cell: 850-567-4488
Email: mye at fsu.edu<mailto:mye at fsu.edu>
http://earth.eoas.fsu.edu/~mye/
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