Skip to main content
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
  • Visit
    • Visit the University of Nebraska–Lincoln
  • Apply
    • Apply to the University of Nebraska–Lincoln
  • Give
    • Give to the University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Log In
Search

Search Form

College of Arts and Sciences
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Search
Log In
  • About
    • Directory
    • News and Events
    • Student and Faculty Awards
    • GeoEthics
    • Student Funding
    • Contact Us
  • Academics
    • Undergraduate
    • Graduate
  • Experiential Learning
    • Get Involved
  • Academic and Career Advising
    • Academic Advising
    • Career Coaching
  • Research
    • Earth
    • Air
    • Water
    • Education
  • Outreach and Impact
    • Alumni
    • Give
  1. Nebraska
  2. CAS
  3. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  4. News

News

Sherilyn Fritz, pictured here at Aconcagua in South America, will will co-direct an international organization that helps study Earth’s past to inform the management of its future.
From Nebraska Today

Fritz named co-chair of climate change body

January 4, 2016
Ross Secord and Carissa Raymond

Student Spotlight: Carissa Raymond

December 23, 2015
Jun Wang
From Nebraska Today

Study: Greenhouse emissions from fertilizers exceed projections

December 4, 2015
From Nebraska Today

Achievements | Honors, awards, publications for Nov. 13 to Dec. 3

December 4, 2015
UNL Chancellor Harvey Perlman (second from right) and Senior Adviser Tom Farrell (right) are pictured with Omani education officials.
From Nebraska Today

Delegation examines cooperative efforts with Oman

November 12, 2015
In wireline coring, a continuous core is extracted from the depth of the test hole, as opposed to just cuttings.
From Nebraska Today

Conservation and Survey celebrates drilling first test hole of its kind

October 19, 2015
Priscilla Grew
From Nebraska Today

Grew's retirement reception is Oct. 19

October 13, 2015
From Nebraska Today

Sunday with a Scientist to feature 'Antarctic Time Machine'

October 6, 2015
Carissa Raymond (right) holds fossilized teeth of a multituberculate mammal, a small rodent-like creature that lived at the end of the dinosaur’s era. During summer 2014, Raymond found a similar fossil later identified as a previously unknown multituberculate species while on a dig in New Mexico. Ross Secord (left), associate professor of earth and atmospheric sciences, led the dig.
From Nebraska Today

Undergrad discovers new mammal species

October 5, 2015
From Nebraska Today

Two decades later, former Ashfall intern finishes excavation

September 23, 2015
Tracy Frank
From Nebraska Today

Frank named Geological Society of America fellow

August 28, 2015
Jason Nolan (left) and Karrie Weber used data from roughly 275,000 groundwater samples in the High Plains and Central Valley aquifers to show that many Americans live less than a mile from wells that often far exceed the EPA's uranium guideline.
From Nebraska Today

Study: 2 major U.S. aquifers have high levels of natural uranium

August 19, 2015

Pagination

  1. First page « First
  2. Previous page ‹‹
  3. …
  4. Page 10
  5. Page 11
  6. Page 12
  7. Page 13
  8. Page 14
  9. Page 15
  10. Current page 16
  11. Page 17
  12. Page 18
  13. Next page ››
  14. Last page Last »

Contact us

https:// www.unl.edu
Address
126 Bessey Hall
P.O. Box 880340
Lincoln, NE 68588-0340 US
Phone
402-472-2663
Email
eas@unl.edu
Social Media

Related links

  • Academic and Career Advising Center
  • Nebraska State Museum
  • School of Natural Resources
  • Water Resources Research Initiative

Campus Links

  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Events
  • Libraries
  • Maps
  • News
  • Office of the Chancellor
  • Report an Incident

Policies & Reports

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Institutional Equity and Compliance
  • Notice of Nondiscrimination
  • Privacy Policy
  • Safety at Nebraska
  • Student Information Disclosures
UNL web framework and quality assurance provided by the Web Developer Network · QA Test
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Established 1869 · Copyright 2025