Lamont in the Media
June 17, 2026
A Snapshot of Continental Crust in the Making
Earth & Climate Science News
Making a difference in your day-to-day life is not only empowering, but can lead to wider cultural and societal change.
And if rivers and lakes had rights, could that help in the fight against climate change?
Consider helping to revive a degraded ecosystem by getting involved in an ecorestoration project.
We’ve gotten better at preventing and tracking oil spills, but oceanographers say much more progress is needed.
Tonight’s Earth Lecture takes a hard look at climate change and the path forward.
Climate science tells us how the world is changing. Climate art shapes how we choose to respond.
The decorated climate scientist is named director of Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and co-founding dean of the newly launched Columbia Climate School.
The Columbia Climate School will be co-led by four of Columbia’s most eminent climate experts: Alex Halliday, Jason Bordoff, Ruth DeFries, and Maureen Raymo.
This pre-college program in Castleton, Vermont, will mobilize students in grades 9–12 to take action and affect change in response to our warming planet.
A new study finds that summer monsoon rainfall in India will become stronger and more erratic, posing a threat to the region’s agriculture and economy.
A Q&A with the geochemist, who plans to investigate a key climate interval millions of years ago.
Controversy over the age of an early fossil of Homo erectus has been settled, and has led to other specimens.
