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Home» (Page 105)

New Wave of Seismic Modeling: Using Supercomputers to Study Earthquakes

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on May 6, 2013   General News  

Red and blue waves triggered by a magnitude 4.6 earthquake rippled outward from the Anchorage area and fizzled out after 45 seconds. Except in Cook Inlet basin, where the waves were trapped for another half-minute, bouncing back and forth, up and down, within the 7.5-kilometer-thick sedimentary basin.

Alaska Science Forum: Big Booms over the Northland

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Apr 19, 2013   General News  

Near a small village in Russia, Marina Ivanova stepped into cross-country skis and kicked toward a hole in the snow. The meteorite specialist with the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History and Vernadsky Institute in Moscow was hunting for fragments of the great Chelyabinsk Meteorite that exploded three days earlier.

Big booms over the northland

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Apr 18, 2013   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Near a small village in Russia, Marina Ivanova stepped into cross-country skis and kicked toward a hole in the snow. The meteorite specialist with the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History and Vernadsky Institute in Moscow was hunting for fragments of the great Chelyabinsk Meteorite that exploded three days earlier.

The year without summer

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Apr 11, 2013   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

An April snowstorm whirling outside my window today seems to be announcing the postponement of spring. As I sit here watching the show, it makes me think back to the shortest summer ever.

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