News Articles and Press Mentions
- Student Research Stories: Jonah Bernstein-Schalet, 2024, DEEPS Spotlight, Hania Khan and Isabel Tribe
- Professor Daniel Ibarra Honored for Exceptional Advising and Mentoring, 2024, Brown Graduate School, Susan Ely
- Will California’s historic storms get even more intense? New research may hold a clue, San Francisco Chronicle, Jack Lee
- From Vision to Reality: 5 Stories of Innovation Fueled by IBES Catalyst Research Awards, IBES News Article
- IBES shares progress on Strategic Plan and other updates at Town Hall & Reception, IBES News Article
- Interview for the Sustainable Visionaries podcast, by Ryan Bollimpalli
- Lloyd et al. (2023, PNAS)
- Trees struggle to ‘breathe’ as climate warms, researchers find, Penn State, by Adrienne Berard (The Weather Channel, EurekAlert, Gulf Times and elsewhere)
- DOE backs Rice study of how soils store carbon, Rice University
- Weller et al. (2023, Nature Astronomy)
- Venus had Earth-like plate tectonics billions of years ago, study suggests, Brown University, by Juan Siliezar
- Study suggests active plate tectonics existed on Venus billions of years ago, not unlike Earth, Brown Daily Herald, by Elise Haulund
- Billions of Years Ago, Venus May Have Had a Key Earthlike Feature, New York Times, by Kenneth Chang
- Ibarra et al. (2023, Nature Geosciences)
- China University of Geosciences (Beijing) researchers provide new insights into the formation of the Tibetan plateau, China University of Geosciences Beijing
- Before reaching the skies, the Himalayas had a leg up, new study shows, Stanford University (EurekAlert, Phys.org and elsewhere)
- Scientists radically rethink how the Himalayas formed millions of years ago, adjusting their age, by Elizabeth Hlavinka, Salon.com (also on Yahoo News)
- New Geological Study Rewrites History Of The World’s Highest Peaks, by David Bressan, Forbes
- Scientists don’t actually have a clue how the Himalayas got so tall, study reveals, by Noa Leach, BBC Science Focus
- A Himalája növekedése, by LANDY-GYEBNÁR MÓNIKA, National Geographic (in Hungarian)
- Evidence of Earth’s Oldest Glaciers Found in South Africa, by Nathaniel Scharping, AGU EoS, August 2023
- Small Shrubs May Have Played a Large Role in Decarbonizing the Ancient Atmosphere, by Meghie Rodrigues, AGU EoS, February 2023
- Study: Enough rare earth minerals to fuel green energy shift, by Seth Borenstein, Associated Press (also on ABC, Boston Globe, Irish News, Independent), January 2023
- The Mass Extinction – S1E2: Oceans Of Plastic, featuring cave monitoring in the Philippines funded and led by our group, Channel News Asia, December 2022
- Beyond speaker series, ongoing work, SEASI looks to make institutional changes, by Elizabeth Hirschfeld, Brown Daily Herald, November 2022
- What Is a Lab-Grown Diamond, Exactly? Eliette Diamonds, 2022
- Piccione et al. (2022, Nature Communications)
- Record of Antarctic ice sheet response to climate cycles found in rock samples, by Tim Stephens, UCSC Press Release (also on Phys.org)
- World’s Largest Ice Sheet, Its Response to Climate Change Analyzed Using Unique Rock Samples, by Marie Morales, The Science Times
- How a hidden cave can help scientists understand the climate, by Emily Benson, High Country News, September 2022
- What stalagmites tell us about climate change, by Lily Lustig, IBES highlight of Natasha Sekhon, September 2022
- Postdoc Natasha Sekhon was awarded Brown’s Postdoctoral Excellence Award for Research/Teaching!
- AGILE Grant Project Press Releases, December 2021
- New NSF Grant Project supports Asian Americans & Pacific Islander students in Geoscience (original by Mae Jackson)
- Grant project supports Asian American and Pacific Islander students in geoscience (Brown News)
- New program supports Asian American, Pacific Islander students in geoscience (University of Hawai’i at Manoa)
- NSF grant supports Asian American and Pacific Islander students in geosciences (Penn State)
- New NSF Grant to support Asian American and Pacific Islander students in Geoscience (UC Merced)
- New NSF Grant to Support Asian Americans and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Students in the Geosciences (Princeton)
- The terrifying warning lurking in the Earth’s ancient rock record, by Peter Brannen, The Atlantic, March 2021
- Wang et al. (2021, AGU Eos)
- Cutting to the Core, by Heather Goss, AGU Eos, June 2021
- Un registro ininterrumpido del clima durante la era de los dinosaurios, Spanish translation in Estudios Planeteando, August 2021
- Disparity in open access practices in the earth sciences, by Olivier Pourrett, Science X, June 2021
- Students Learn New Skills with Scientist-in-Training Programs, by Katherine Kornei, AGU Eos, November 2020
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Q&A: What does it mean to be Asian American in the geosciences? Stanford Earth Highlight, May 2020
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Geologist Ibarra investigates paleoclimate through water, by Jesse Bryant, Jackson Hole News & Guide, March 11, 2020
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Geology for everyone, Stanford Earth Spotlight, October 21, 2019
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Introducing: Daniel Ibarra, Institute at Brown for Environment & Society, 2019
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How Volcanic Mountains Cool the Climate, by L. Poppick, AGU Eos, September 2019
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Caves Rugenstein et al. “Neogene cooling driven by land surface reactivity rather than increased weathering fluxes” (2019, Nature)
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How the weathering of rocks cooled the Earth, by Peter Ruegg (adapted by Danielle Tucker), July 4th 2019
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More ‘reactive’ land surfaces cooled the Earth down, by Josef Zens, July 4th 2019 (also on Phys.org and ScienceDaily)
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The Earth’s Thermostat (in German), by Friedhelm von Blanckenburg for Spektrum der Wissenschaft, February 19th 2020
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2018-2019 Balik Scientist Coverage:
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Balik Scientist Dr. Daniel Ibarra Kicks Off the UP-NIGS 2019 Lecture Series, January 24th 2019, DOST-PCIEERD
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Rescuing geologic and climate records, by Alex Kekauoha, March 7th 2019, Stanford News
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Ibarra et al. “Warm and cold wet states in the western United States during the Pliocene-Pleistocene” (2018, Geology)
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Extinct Lakes of the American Desert West, Featured Paper, Geological Society of America, February 22nd 2018 (also on Phys.org and EurekaAlert!).
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Wymore et al. “Critical zone structure controls concentration-discharge relationships and solute generation…” (2017, Water Resources Research)
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A quantitative framework for analyzing the drivers of solute fluxes in the critical zone, Editor’s Highlight, Water Resources Research, July 21st 2017.
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Caves et al. “The Neogene de-greening of Central Asia” (2016, Geology)
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Stanford researchers capture Central Asia’s ‘de-greening’ over millions of years into a modern-day desert, Adam Hadhazy, Stanford University Press Release, October 13th 2016 (also on Phys.org)
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Longest-lasting deserts are more than 30 millions years old, Fred Pearce, New Scientist, September 29th 2016
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Mix et al. “A hot and high Eocene Sierra Nevada” (2016, GSA Bulletin)
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Rock Samples Reveal Age Of The Sierra Nevada, Daniel Kelly, Environmental Monitor, January 7th 2016
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Sierra Nevada confirmed to be 40 million years old, Lisa Krieger, San Jose Mercury, December 13th 2015
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Northern Sierra Nevada Formed Nearly 40 Million Years Ago, Tim Fang, CBS San Francisco, December 11th 2015
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Stanford scientists crack mystery of the Sierra Nevada’s age, Miles Traer, Stanford University Press Release, December 11th 2015 (also on Phys.org)
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von Blanckenburg et al. “Stable runoff and weathering fluxes into the oceans over Quaternary climate cycles” (2015, Nature Geoscience)
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Weathering and river discharge surprisingly constant during Ice Age Cycles, by Ker Than, Stanford University Press Release, June 8th 2015 (also on ScienceDaily and Phys.org)
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Constant weathering, by Franz Ossing, GFZ Potsdam Press Release, June 8th 2015
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Oster et al. “Steering of westerly storms over western North America at the Last Glacial Maximum” (2015, Nature Geoscience)
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Time when climate was topsy-turvy in Western U.S. aids climate prediction effects, Research News at Vanderbilt, by David Salisbury, February 23rd 2015 (also on Stanford News, NSF, Phys.org and ScienceDaily)
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A cooler and wetter southwest US-prehistoric climate change, Research News at Vanderbilt YouTube Video, Jessica Oster, February 24th 2015
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Scientists Create Climate Map of Western US 21,000 Years Ago: How It Will Help Understand Potential ‘Megadrought’, Tech Times, Jim Algar, February 23rd 2015
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Scientists Look to the Past to Predict Future Rainfall Patterns in the American West, Science World Report, Catherine Griffin, February 24th 2015
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Ice Age map helps predict the next mega drought, Futurity, March 9th 2015
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Ibarra et al. “Rise and fall of late Pleistocene pluvial lakes…” (2014, GSA Bulletin)
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Stanford scientists solve mystery of ancient American lakes, Stanford Report, by Ker Than, June 5th 2014 (also on Phys.org)
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America’s OTHER great lakes: Scientists solve mystery of how massive bodies of water in the west formed during last ice age, Daily Mail (UK), by Mark Prigg, June 6th 2014
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Mystery of West’s Mammoth Ancient Lakes Solved, Newser, Elizabeth Moore, June 9th 2014
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GSA Bulletin Press Release on Phys.org, Kea Giles, June 24th 2014
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Sharing Lake Surprise, Stanford Digital Repository Blog, Amy Hodge, July 24th 2014
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