URI lecture to examine ‘mysteries of dynamic ocean planet,’ May
14
Dave Lavallee,
URI
NARRAGANSETT,
R.I. –Christopher Kincaid, professor of oceanography at the University of Rhode
Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography, will present a free public lecture on
May 14 entitled “Unraveling the mysteries of a dynamic ocean planet: A user’s
manual for motion in our oceans and inner earth.”
Sponsored by the URI Friends of Oceanography, the event begins at 6 p.m. in the Coastal institute Auditorium at the URI Narragansett Bay campus. A reception with the speaker will follow the lecture.
Kincaid will discuss geophysical fluid dynamics -- the study of why Earth’s various fluid systems circulate the way they do. He’ll share results on water circulation within Narragansett Bay and how this influences the transport of chemicals and biology, and discuss how the flow of hot material in the Earth's mantle layer influences volcanic output in the Pacific Northwest, with a particular focus on the Yellowstone hotspot and super volcano.
Kincaid earned a bachelor’s degree in earth
science from Wesleyan University and a master’s and doctorate in geophysics
from Johns Hopkins University. He teaches graduate courses on marine and
environmental fluid dynamics, oceanographic modeling and geodynamics, as well
as an undergraduate course, The Ocean Planet, which covers topics ranging from
planetary science to Earth system science.Sponsored by the URI Friends of Oceanography, the event begins at 6 p.m. in the Coastal institute Auditorium at the URI Narragansett Bay campus. A reception with the speaker will follow the lecture.
Kincaid will discuss geophysical fluid dynamics -- the study of why Earth’s various fluid systems circulate the way they do. He’ll share results on water circulation within Narragansett Bay and how this influences the transport of chemicals and biology, and discuss how the flow of hot material in the Earth's mantle layer influences volcanic output in the Pacific Northwest, with a particular focus on the Yellowstone hotspot and super volcano.
In describing his research, Kincaid said “a goal of geological oceanography is to understand the relationship between Earth’s convecting interior and our oceans over the entire spectrum of geologic time. This feeds directly into the very pressing need for understanding where Earth’s ocean-climate system is headed, which clearly hinges on our understanding of how it has worked in past.”