2025
- Aug. 25, 2025 — I am happy to welcome my first two graduate students ever, Bella Seppi and Kitsel Lusted! Bella will be pursuing a PhD working on Venus seismology, and Kitsel will be pursuing an MSc working on cryoseismology with relevance to treaty monitoring.
- Aug. 25, 2025 — On Sept. 12, Klara Maisch will be featured at a Mather Library First Friday event where she will showcase, among other work, some of the art-sci collaborations we have worked on. The pieces will remain on display through the academic year.
- Jul. 14, 2025 — I gave a public science talk for the Science for Alaska Summer Series on July 12th, 2025, entitled "Seismology in Alaska and on Venus". You can find a recording here!
- Feb. 24, 2025 — The 2025 Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics Community Workshop (CIG: TNG) will be hosted August 4–7, 2025 in Breckenridge, Colorado! [Click here for more details]
2024
- Nov. 20, 2024 — I'll be at AGU24 in Washington D.C. this December presenting a poster on our Venus simulation work (12/12/24 at poster S43C-3456).
- Aug. 8, 2024 — Myself and colleagues at UAF and UAA have been awarded a 3-year NASA EPSCoR project to estimate ground motion and wind noise to help inform specifications for a potential Venus lander mission.
- Apr. 22, 2024 — In late May I'll be instructing on seismic simulation and inversion codes SPECFEM and SeisFlows at the 2024 SCOPED Workshop, CyberTraining for Seismology, in Seattle, WA.
- Apr. 20, 2024 — Please join us for a hybrid SPECFEM Developers Workshop during the week of SSA 2024
- Apr. 20, 2024 — This month I'll be at SSA2024 presenting work on ambient noise adjoint tomography of northern Alaska
2023
- Nov. 20, 2023 — I won the 2023 New Zealand Geophysics Prize for two publications that came out of my PhD. You can find a UAF article about this award here!
- Oct. 1, 2023 — Official start of my faculty position at UAF!
- Aug. 1, 2023 — I am happy to announce that I have accepted an Assistant Professorship at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, as a part of the Geophysical Institute, the Department of Geosciences within the College of Natural Science and Mathematics, and the Wilson Alaska Technical Center
