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Presented By: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Special Seminar: Perils and Triumphs of Coring Seymour Island, Antarctica

Dr. Adriane Lam, Assistant Professor, Department of Earth Sciences, Binghamton University

Dr. Lam standing in a white parka in front of an icy mountain with a distant body of water behind it Dr. Lam standing in a white parka in front of an icy mountain with a distant body of water behind it
Dr. Lam standing in a white parka in front of an icy mountain with a distant body of water behind it
This special seminar is co-hosted by EEB and UMMP and will be in-person.

Throughout the Late Cretaceous, massive volcanic eruptions, called Deccan volcanism, occurred on India, spewing carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere. The massive amounts of greenhouse gases associated with Deccan volcanism can be used as an analogue for current and future anthropogenic warming scenarios. In the austral summer of 2026, a team of 12 sailed to Seymour Island, Antarctica, an island that contains phenomenal marine rocks and sediments that were deposited during the time of Deccan volcanism. The team will analyze these microfossils and sediments to determine how marine plankton responded to warming caused by Deccan volcanism to understand how such communities may change under future warming scenarios. This talk will provide insight into the Late Cretaceous world, the motivation behind the research, and our journey to and from Seymour Island, Antarctica.
Dr. Lam standing in a white parka in front of an icy mountain with a distant body of water behind it Dr. Lam standing in a white parka in front of an icy mountain with a distant body of water behind it
Dr. Lam standing in a white parka in front of an icy mountain with a distant body of water behind it

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