T. Mylan Stout Lecture Series
Fall 2008
Lectures begin at 3:30 pm, in 117 Bessey Hall, except where notedRefreshments served at 3:15 pm
Friday, September 5
Paul Markowski, Penn State University
“What vortex lines might be telling us about tornadogenesis”
Friday, September 12
Peter Colarco, NASA
“A View of Earth's Aerosol System from Space to Your Office Chair”
Friday, September 19
Ed Evenson, Lehigh University
“Giant Landslides in the Andes and the Origin of Darwin's Boulders”
Friday, September 26
Dave Robinson, Rutgers University
“Snow cover in a warming world”
Friday, October 3
GSA meeting in Houston,
“No Stout Lecture”
Friday, October 10
Jeff Basara, Oklahoma Climatological Survey
“The Oklahoma City Micronet Project”
Friday, October 17
Tammy Rittenour, Utah State University
“Unravelling the Geoarcheology and Holocene Stratigraphy of the Grand Canyon and southern Colorado Plateau”
Friday, October 24
Jun Wang, UNL Geosciences; Alumni Weekend
“Ice cloud formation and Climate Change: Effect of Solid and Aqueous Sulfate Aerosols”
Friday, October 31
Eugene Domack, Hamilton College
“Larsen Ice Shelf disintegration, catastrophe or climate change ripple?”
Friday, November 7
J. Fred Read, Virginia Tech
“Phanerozoic global climates from carbonate platform records”
Friday, November 14
Jay Larson, Argonne National Laboratory
“Climate and Earth System Models: What's Under the Hood, and What's Going There Next?”
Friday, November 21
Christopher Paola, University of Minnesota
“Not Fake Anything: Insights from Experimental Stratigraphy and Geomorphology”
Friday, December 5
Joe Schaefer, NOAA
“Severe Thunderstorm Forecasting Research at the Storm Prediction Center”

