Rast-Holbrook Seminar Series
"Filling in the Gaps: Palynology at Birthplace of North American Vertebrate Paleontology"
"Filling in the Gaps: Palynology at Birthplace of North American Vertebrate Paleontology"
By Tatyanna Pruitt
Frank Ettensohn, professor in the University of Kentucky Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, has received the Grover E. Murray Memorial Distinguished Educator Award for 2018 from the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), an international association of petroleum geologists. The award is given in recognition of distinguished and outstanding contributions to geological education.
By Amaya DeVicente
Last year, 18 percent of the University of Kentucky graduating class graduated with global experience. The university’s International Center has taken steps to increase that percentage.
The UK International Center’s Education Abroad and Exchanges program (UK EA) recently announced a new 2018-19 scholarship and program fee reduction initiative for selected UK exchange partners around the world, ranging from $1,000-$5,000.
University of Kentucky student, Rachel Pagano, explains her undergraduate research experience. Pagano is a Senior Natural Resources and Environmental Science major at UK.
For more information about this event and the history of the department visit: https://ees.as.uky.edu/ees-125th-anniversary
Who wants to live forever? Four scientists have discovered the fountain of youth in a new stem cell procedure. Little do they know that the oldest member of the team is trying to destroy their project. In one night they question history, women’s place in science, and the value of time as they wrestle with the fate of an overcrowded earth.
Timeless: A Scientific Comedy, by Raegan Payne, won the biennial Prize for Women Playwrights and will have its world premiere on November 2-4 at the Farish Theater, Lexington Public Library, 140 East Main Street.
Innovations in stem cell technologies have long been a fascination for the playwright. Payne started college as a pre-med student at Sewanee: The University of the South, and only later discovered a love of playwriting. Her script was blindly chosen from over 180 entries from 31 states in the U.S. plus Canada and New Zealand. She lives in southern California but was born in Murray, Ky., and raised in Louisville. She will hold a conversation with the audience after the Saturday matinee.
https://womenwriters.as.uky.edu/timeless-ticketing-form
Thomas D. Spalding, Vice President–Geoscience for Pioneer Natural Resources, was born in Muskegon, Michigan, in 1958 and grew up in Louisville, Ky. He attended Westport High School, played on the football team, and graduated in 1976. He attended the University of Kentucky and was a Resident Advisor in Hagen Hall from 1978 to 1980.
UK EES alumnus Tim Elam (M.S. Geology, '81) describes how his geological training at UK prepared him for a successful career in industry and for his current role as a seasonal interpretative park ranger at Grand Canyon National Park.