UMass Amherst Dept. of Earth, Geographic, and Climate Sciences

UMass Amherst Dept. of Earth, Geographic, and Climate Sciences Geology (BS, BA)
Earth Systems (BS)
Geosciences (MS & PhD)
Geography (BA, BS & MS)

Hands-on experience, outside in the field, has always been a core component of educating and training the earth science ...
04/30/2026

Hands-on experience, outside in the field, has always been a core component of educating and training the earth science workforce. A modern fleet of vans makes field trips, outdoor labs for courses, research, and public outreach accessible for students.

Please join us in supporting high-quality student education during with a small gift to EGCS:

https://umass.scalefunder.com/gday/giving-day/111216/department/119408

Dr. LaToya Eaves is the invited speaker for this year's Bromery Lecture, speaking on Black Geographies and the Global St...
04/09/2026

Dr. LaToya Eaves is the invited speaker for this year's Bromery Lecture, speaking on Black Geographies and the Global Struggle for Liberation in the Appalachian South. Join us on Monday, April 13th at 12:20pm in ILC S211 - https://www.umass.edu/earth-geography-climate/events/black-geographies-and-global-struggle-liberation-appalachian-south-bromery-lecture-dr-latoya-eaves

The Bromery lecture is a once-a-year special lecture, endowed by the family of the late Commonwealth Professor of Geophysics and former UMass Amherst Chancellor Dr. Bill Bromery, intended to bring eminent scholars and role models to the University.

04/08/2026

Permafrost around the world is thawing, and this troubling trend is starting to catch the world’s attention. In Alaska, the “active layer” of permafrost has been deepening in recent decades due to the warming climate, and this change is causing proportionally more groundwater—and problematic dissolved organic carbon (DOC)—to be delivered into Arctic rivers.

In a first-of-its-kind study, a team of researchers led by geoscientist Michael Rawlins—extension associate professor in the UMass Amherst Dept. of Earth, Geographic, and Climate Sciences and the associate director of the Climate System Research Center at UMass Amherst—has used a region in Alaska (the size of Wisconsin) to show in fine-grained detail what happens when Arctic permafrost thaws.

“How much DOC finds its way to the ocean via rivers and streams is a part of the carbon cycle we don’t know much about,” says Rawlins. “We desperately need more of these land-to-ocean connection studies if we’re to fully grapple with the problem of global warming and the effects it will have on coastal ecosystems.”

Learn more: https://bit.ly/4vjzHaY

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627 N Pleasant Street
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