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CZO All Hands 2013 Seminar

PRESENTATION/TALK

Adding Time to Geochemical and Hydrologic Processes using Environmental Tracers by Dr. – Kip Solomon, Professor and Department Chair, Geology and Geophysics, University of Utah

301 Steidle Building

It is with great pleasure we announce the next CZO seminar will feature our All Hands Guest, Kip Solomon, Professor and Chair of Geology and Geophysics, at the University of Utah.  Dr. Solomon is a groundwater hydrologist and will speak on "Adding Time to Geochemical and Hydrologic Processes using Environmental Traces" in 301 Steidle Building at 4pm on Thursday, May 9th.   


Abstract

Environmental tracers can provide a measure of time to geochemical and hydrologic processes as a result of changing concentrations in the atmosphere (and hence recharging groundwater) and/or due to radioactive decay and production.  A growing number of these tracers are available for hydrochemical studies on time scales of about 1 to 60 years.  This presentation will review the basic concepts behind the use of environmental tracers and will demonstrate their use for understanding reaction rates of low-temperature weather of silicates and water resources and groundwater/surface water interactions.


Short Bio

Kip Solomon is currently a professor at the University of Utah and Chair of the Department of Geology and Geophysics. His education includes a Ph.D. (1992) in Earth Sciences from the University of Waterloo, an M. S. (1985) in Geology from the University of Utah, and a B.S. (1979) in Geological Engineering from the University of Utah.  In 2006 he was the Chair of the Hydrogeology Division of the Geological Society of America, was the 2005 Darcy Lecturer for the National Groundwater Association.  He has represented the United States on numerous committees at the International Atomic Energy Agency regarding the use of tracers in water resources and has served on several panels for the National Research Council of the United States.  He worked on the development of the tritium/helium-3 groundwater dating method during graduate studies and has subsequently been involved in using environmental tracers in a variety of hydrologic and geochemical environments.  He currently has projects in Central and South America, Eastern Europe, and in the western United States.


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