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    February 2023

    Feature Story

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    Feb 21, 2023
    • Environmental Chemistry

    Newly discovered form of salty ice could exist on surface of extraterrestrial moons

    Red streaks across the surface of Europa, the smallest of Jupiter’s four large moons.
    NASA/JPL/Galileo
    This image shows red streaks across the surface of Europa, the smallest of Jupiter’s four large moons. The discovery of new types of salty ice could explain the material in these streaks and provide clues on the composition of Europa’s ice-covered ocean.

    The red streaks crisscrossing the surface of Europa, one of Jupiter’s moons, are striking. Scientists suspect it is a frozen mixture of water and salts, but its chemical signature is mysterious because it matches no known substance on Earth.

    An international team led by the University of Washington may have solved the puzzle with the discovery of a new type of solid crystal that forms when water and table salt combine in cold and high-pressure conditions. Researchers believe the new substance created in a lab on Earth could form at the surface and bottom of these worlds’ deep oceans.

    The study, published the week of Feb. 20 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, announces a new combination for two of Earth’s most common substances: water and sodium chloride, or table salt.

    “It’s rare nowadays to have fundamental discoveries in science,” said lead author Baptiste Journaux, a UW acting assistant professor of Earth and space sciences. “Salt and water are very well known at Earth conditions. But beyond that, we’re totally in the dark. And now we have these planetary objects that probably have compounds that are very familiar to us, but at very exotic conditions. We have to redo all the fundamental mineralogical science that people did in the 1800s, but at high pressure and low temperature. It is an exciting time.”

    Read more at UW News »

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    Feb 1, 2023
    • Ecology
    • College of the Environment
    • Awards and Honors

    College of the Environment researcher John Marzluff named 2022 AAAS Fellow

    John Marzluff
    John Marzluff

    Four University of Washington researchers have been named AAAS Fellows, according to a Jan. 31 announcement by the American Association for the Advancement of Science. They are among 506 new fellows from around the world, who are recognized for their “scientifically and socially distinguished achievements” in science and engineering.

    John Marzluff, a professor of wildlife science in the UW School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, is honored for advances in our understanding of how humans impact birds, and for communicating the importance of birds to the public. Marzluff’s lab studies the relationship between humans and birds to discover how to best conserve wildlife in our modern, human-dominated world.

    A tradition dating back to 1874, election as an AAAS Fellow is a lifetime honor, and all fellows are expected to meet the commonly held standards of professional ethics and scientific integrity. The new fellows will be celebrated in Washington, D.C., in summer 2023.

    Read more at UW News »

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    Feb 3, 2023
    • Climate
    • Geophysical Sciences

    Ice cores show even dormant volcanoes leak abundant sulfur into the atmosphere

    Sulfurous plumes in Laugavegur, Iceland
    These sulfurous plumes in Laugavegur, Iceland, are not recorded by satellite observations. Ice core analysis shows that such plumes have a much larger effect on the level of aerosols in the atmosphere than previously believed.

    Volcanoes draw plenty of attention when they erupt. But new research led by the University of Washington shows that volcanoes leak a surprisingly high amount of their atmosphere- and climate-changing gases in their quiet phases. A Greenland ice core shows that volcanoes quietly release at least three times as much sulfur into the Arctic atmosphere than estimated by current climate models.

    The study, led by the University of Washington and published Jan. 2 in Geophysical Research Letters, has implications for better understanding Earth’s atmosphere and its relationship with climate and air quality.

    “We found that on longer timescales the amount of sulfate aerosols released during passive degassing is much higher than during eruptions,” said first author Ursula Jongebloed, a UW doctoral student in atmospheric sciences. “Passive degassing releases at least 10 times more sulfur into the atmosphere, on decadal timescales, than eruptions, and it could be as much as 30 times more.”

    Read more at UW News »

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    Feb 21, 2023
    • College of the Environment

    Nominations for 2023 College of the Environment Awards open through March 10

    Do you know a student, faculty, postdoc, or staff member who deserves recognition for their work? The College of the Environment Awards recognize individuals and teams who have gone above and beyond their own roles and have made significant contributions not only to our college, but to the University of Washington overall and the communities we serve.

    Each year the College of the Environment recognizes outstanding members of our College community in the following categories:

    • Distinguished Staff Member
    • Exceptional Mentoring of Undergraduates
    • Graduate Dean’s Medalist
    • Outstanding Community Impact: Staff, Faculty or Student
    • Outstanding Diversity Commitment
    • Outstanding Teaching Faculty
    • Undergraduate Dean’s Medalist

    Individuals or groups may be nominated in any of these categories except Undergraduate and Graduate Dean’s Medalist awards, which are individual awards. Specific eligibility criteria apply to each award.

    Award recipients receive $1,000 (or $500/person if they are recognized as a member of a team award) and are recognized both in College communications and at a departmental award ceremony.

    More information about award criteria and submission instructions are available on the UW Environment website. Nominations must be submitted by 5:00 pm on Friday, March 10, 2023, to be considered.

    Submit a nomination

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    Feb 21, 2023
    • Natural Hazards

    UW experts discuss the earthquake in Turkey and Syria

    Harold Tobin
    Harold Tobin

    Three University of Washington experts have provided the following quotes in response to the magnitude 7.8 earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria on Monday morning.

    Harold Tobin is director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network and a UW professor of Earth and space sciences. Tobin studies tectonic plate boundaries with a focus on how faults work and the conditions inside them that lead to earthquakes. He also serves as Washington state’s seismologist.

    “This region along the East Anatolian Fault has a well-known history of seismic activity, and it had been identified by Turkish emergency management as a place of high seismic hazard,” Tobin said. “However, its known history does not include earthquakes of magnitude 7 or above since seismometers existed to measure them, though historic records indicate earthquakes of up to magnitude 7.4 have occurred. The scale and size of this magnitude 7.8 quake and the one that followed are both larger than what was most likely anticipated. The fact that there was a second large and damaging quake, the magnitude 7.5 that occurred about nine hours later, is not unprecedented globally, but is very uncommon, especially at this size.

    Read more at UW News »

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    Events

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    March 13, 2023

    Nature and Health Speaks: “Exploring Personalized Virtual Nature as a Tool for People Living with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)” with Olivia McAnirlin, PhD Candidate

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    March 18, 2023

    Gardens for BIPoC - Free Arboretum walking tour

    Calendar Icon Check out our calendar for more events

    News From Around the College

    • Scientists grow sea stars in lab to understand mass die-off along Pacific Coast, Reuters/Friday Harbor Labs
    • This Magnolia beach could offer ‘a microcosm for Puget Sound restoration’, The Seattle Times/Washington Sea Grant
    • North Cascades grizzlies could gain habitat as the climate warms, KNKX/Climate Impacts Group
    • Meet the animals with love lives more complicated than yours | CNN, CNN/Aquatic and Fishery Sciences

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