news

Mar 04, 2025 Congrats to Crystal Fu for her new Arctic sea ice proxy model, BaySIC, published today! Open source Python implementation, here.
Jan 28, 2025 Check out our new work, here, led by Prof. Jess Tierney on reconstructing globally resolved Pliocene Warm Period (3-4 Ma) temperatures!
Sep 15, 2024 A hearty welcome to our new lab members, PhD students Crystal Fu and Claudia Offner, and MPhil student Emily Kraus! Read more about their work, here.
Jun 01, 2024 Cambridge undergrads: consider taking our new Part II course on Data Analytics in Climate and Environmental Science being led by Becky Dell and myself!
May 27, 2024 Congrats to MPhil student Crystal Fu for winning the prize for best student talk at this year’s PalaeoArc Conference in Stockholm!
Apr 17, 2024 Important work out today in Science Advances led by Vince Cooper (UW): controlling for pattern effects using paleo-reconstructions from the Last Ice Age reduce climate sensitivity estimates!
Nov 27, 2023 New Perspective piece out in Nature Geoscience today on fostering women participation in paleo-science, led by Bess Koffman and myself!
Sep 15, 2023 Welcome to our new lab members, PhD students Sizhe Chen and Peisong Zheng! Read more about their work, here.
Nov 01, 2022 Interested in doing globally relevant paleo-climate/glaciological research for grad school? Curious about life in Cambridge, UK? Please see our new NERC-DPT position, here, and reach out if interested!
Oct 04, 2022 How have ice core science partnerships and parity evolved over time? See highlights from our recent presentation at the 3rd International Partnerships and Ice Cores Sciences (IPICS) symposium, here.
Jul 24, 2022 Excited to announce our new NSF-funded proposal to reconstruct global warming, ice sheet collapse, and sea level rise during the Last Interglacial warm period!
Apr 01, 2022 Honored to have been named a 2023 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions fellow.
Feb 01, 2022 Very pleased to be featured in a recent PBS “Weathered” episode on 21st century weather extremes, seen here.
Dec 19, 2021 Road-tripping for the holidays? Check out the following Nature Podcast and Radio Ecoshock episodes for interesting discussions on our recent work.
Nov 10, 2021 New paper out today in Nature on reconstructing the global climate evolution since the last Ice Age, 24,000 years ago. Please see our News & Views feature written by Shaun Marcott‬ and Jeremy Shakun, here, and our press release, here.
Oct 15, 2021 Congrats to Sarah Das (WHOI) whose photograph (highlighting our Greenland ice cap coring work) was selected for the cover of this month’s Nature Geoscience issue.
Sep 13, 2021 New paper out today in PNAS on understanding past changes and future changes in the North Atlantic jet stream. See press release, here.
Sep 09, 2021 New paper out in Nature Geoscience on reconstructing past ice cap changes from coastal Greenland ice cores. See press release, here.
Mar 30, 2021 Our paper on reconstructing global temperatures from 24,000 years ago to present has now been submitted. Check out the pre-print (non peer-reviewed), here.
Nov 15, 2020 I will be highlighting exciting new results on reconstructing global temperatures from 24,000 years ago to present in upcoming talks at QUIGS and AGU. Email me for links!
Sep 17, 2019 Copies of my dissertation “Greenlandic Ice Archives of North Atlantic Common Era Climate” available upon request, or check out this amazing graphic recording of my dissertation talk created in real time by Carrie @HeartwoodVisuals.
May 15, 2019 New paper out in Nature, highlighting ice core reconstructions of marine productivity changes across the North Atlantic (MIT media release, here).
Feb 01, 2019 Interested in Atlantic-sector climate variability, and its discourse with humans of the past, present, and future? Check out our new seminar series: “North Atlantic Climate and Civilization”. We’ve a fantastic lineup of speakers, live-streamed here from WHOI every Tuesday, 1:30-2:30 ET.
Jan 10, 2019 New paper out led by Luke Trusel, along with Sarah Das, myself and coauthors in Nature. Our takeaway? Greenland melting and runoff is currently “off the charts”.