GSO Profile of GSO Graduate Christine Gardiner whose research was on PFAS in Narragansett Bay.
Continue reading "GSO Profiles – GSO Graduate Christine L. Gardiner"Author: vmberounsky
GSO Profiles – GSO Graduate Nicholas Celico
GSO Graduate Nick Celico developed a shellfish restoration plan for Winnapaug Pond in Westerly, R.I. and as part of that, shellfish will be transplanted into the pond.
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May 15, 2020 Welcome to the third in our new series: GSO Profiles! Each post will feature a brief interview with a member of the GSO community. Our first several profiles will be of GSO students who either graduated this past December or will this month. These profiles are one way we can celebrate the […]
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Interview with GSO graduate Rebecca J. Stevik about her Ph.D. work on bacteria in oysters.
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Interview with recent GSO graduate Colin Jones who studied paleoceanography with Dr. Rebecca Robinson in the Southern Ocean.
Continue reading "GSO Profiles – GSO Graduate Colin Jones"Bay Campus (B)log: The Scott W. Nixon Lecture Series: Remaining Skeptical, Seven Years Later
The Seventh Annual Scott W. Nixon lecture will feature Pál Weihe, MD, who will discuss emergent contaminants called PFASs and their effects on human health in the Arctic.
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February has Valentines Day and is American Heart Month so it’s certainly the month when you can wear your heart on your sleeve. In that vein, here is my winter and spring “Favorite Five” list of what makes the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO) so special and why we “heart” GSO.
Continue reading "Bay Campus (B)log: Let me count the ways I love you"Bay Campus (B)log: The Once and Future Heart of the Bay Campus
Just as one’s heart isn’t centered but is on the left side of one’s body, the Mosby Center is on the left side of South Ferry Road. The last building on the road that leads visitors to the Bay Campus, the small, unassuming “North Lab” as it was originally called, is the oldest building on […]
Continue reading "Bay Campus (B)log: The Once and Future Heart of the Bay Campus"Bay Campus (B)log: Ocean Scientists for the Ocean State – Voting for Rhode Island with their Feet
A large number of GSO graduates choose to stay in the Ocean State, and Rhode Island reaps the benefits. Not only does the state get their expertise, but these alums contribute directly to the state’s economy.
Continue reading "Bay Campus (B)log: Ocean Scientists for the Ocean State – Voting for Rhode Island with their Feet"Bay Campus (B)log: Catalina Martinez: Exploring the Ocean and Sharing It With Us
From a young age, Catalina Martinez would study puddles on her street and wonder what was at the bottom of them. Now, as the Regional Program Manager for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s Office of Ocean Exploration and Research (OER) with an office by Narragansett Bay at the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School […]
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