Talks and presentations

See a map of all the places I've given a talk!

Transit Times and Reaction Rates: Coupling Hydrologic and Geochemical Perspectives in a Montane Watershed in the Central Sierra Nevada

December 10, 2024

AGU Oral Presentation, American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting 2024, Washington DC

Presented on preliminary work focusing on coupling groundwater residence times with reaction rates in the subsurface in the Sagehen Creek watershed. Early work captures tail end of snowmelt season of California in 2023. Added Ge/Si tracers not included in the IPGP talk

Transit Times and Reaction Rates: Coupling Hydrologic and Geochemical Perspectives in a Montane Watershed in the Central Sierra Nevada

December 15, 2023

G2E Oral Presentation, G2E Seminar at Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, Paris, France

Presented on preliminary work focusing on coupling groundwater residence times with reaction rates in the subsurface in the Sagehen Creek watershed. Early work captures tail end of snowmelt season of California in 2023. Future work will incorporate the entirety of the snowmelt season of 2024.

Traceable Climate Change and its Impact on the Finger Lakes region of New York: Early Interpretations and Potential Consequences on Long- Term Biogeochemical Cycles

December 15, 2023

AGU Oral Presentation, American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting 2023, San Francisco, CA

Presented on how snow to rain climatic transitions are being observed with isotopes and concentration-discharge relationships. The key implication being, that as the Finger Lakes observe increased rainfall, we can expect to see their isotopic composition become more enriched overtime, and that nutrient loading into the lakes should also increase overtime.

An Isotopic Snapshot of the Finger Lakes: Implications and a path forward

February 03, 2023

Symposium Talk, Biogeochemistry, Environmental Science, and Sustainability (BESS) Graduate Student Association Spring Symposium, Ithaca, NY

Discussed my preliminary work and findings of hydrogen and oxygen stable isotope composition of the Finger Lakes and described future work to help constrain the sourcing of observed signals!