Colorado School of Mines graduate student Adam Malsam was monitoring a rock slope on Floyd Hill, near where Interstate 70 and US Highway 6 meet, when he noticed something a bit unusual.
The special award recognizes individuals who have made a specific technical contribution to exploration geophysics, such as an invention or a theoretical or conceptual advancement.
I came to Mines as an associate professor in 2012 after having been tenured at Penn State. I moved to Mines for the remarkable Hydrologic Science and Engineering Program we have here on campus. After
Five university teams from around the world descended on the Mines campus June 2-3 to demonstrate the systems they designed and built for moving lunar dirt, or regolith, around the Moon’s surface.
Why did you choose to come to Mines? What have you enjoyed most about being here? I chose to come to Mines because I wanted to attend a college that would challenge me. I was also drawn to the smaller
Geology Professor Kamini Singha and postdoctoral researcher Joel Singley are members of the inaugural cohort of a new American Geophysics Union program to empower scientists to build sustainable partnerships with policymakers.
Two Mines professors contributed to a new study, led by a Mines alum and published May 6 in the journal Science, that proves value of electromagnetic techniques in a new polar environment.
The Center for Advanced Subsurface Earth Resource Models (CASERM) is one of the nation’s premier research centers developing fundamental knowledge that transforms the way geoscience data are used in the discovery and mining of critical minerals and metals.
Why did you choose to come to Mines? What have you enjoyed most about being here? The campus location, community and professors were outstanding for my target degree. The thing I have enjoyed the most