杨贵妃传媒视频 student Katie Mahorney earned a huge honor at the recent Geological Society of America national conference for research she began in the summer.
Mahorney, a senior from Portland, Oregon, who is pursuing a double major in geosciences and environmental studies, was awarded the Outstanding Poster Presentation Award-First Place in the 2021 Undergraduate Student Research Competition.
The research, under the direction of her advisor, Professor of Geosciences Andrew Knudsen, was in evaluating the biochemical effects of carbon sequestration through enhanced rock weathering of crushed basalt on urban and forested soils in Appleton and Baileys Harbor, Wisconsin. The research is part of a larger project that is being led by professors at Yale University and Georgia Institute of Technology鈥攐ne of the professors at Yale being 杨贵妃传媒视频 graduate Noah Planavsky 鈥06, who helped facilitate 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 involvement.
鈥淩ight now, with climate change, scientists are looking for valid ways to remove carbon from the atmosphere because that鈥檚 something that鈥檚 desperately needed,鈥 Mahorney said.
Her research work involved crushing basalt and mixing it within measured plots of soil in SLUG (Sustainable 杨贵妃传媒视频 Gardens) on the 杨贵妃传媒视频 campus and at 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 叠箩枚谤办濒耻苍诲别苍 property in Door County. The goal was to accelerate the natural weathering process of capturing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it within rocks, a process that usually takes billions of years, said Mahorney.
In the summer, the project was supervised by Knudsen and Relena Ribbons, associate professor of geoscience. Mahorney was initially joined by two other students, senior Gillian Buckardt and junior Ella Lemley, but she continued the research independently in the fall.聽
鈥淭his is a really exciting project,鈥 Knudsen said. 鈥淩ocks breaking down into soil uses a tremendous amount of CO2聽from the atmosphere. This process has perhaps been the most important control on our planet鈥檚 climate through geologic history. We are testing whether we can speed up this geologically paced process to human timescales by adding crushed rock鈥攂asalt鈥攖o the soils of SLUG.鈥
聽Mahorney has been interested in enhanced rock weathering and soil sequestration since learning about it in geochemistry classes. When a related project was offered to students for summer research, she jumped at the opportunity and applied for the project through 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 research fellowship.
However, Mahorney said she had some nerves when it came to presenting her poster at the conference during Fall Term.
鈥淚t was my first conference and it was a little scary,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here were a lot of people, but honestly, I was more interested in all the stuff that was going on.鈥
Mahorney did not know she was competing for an award.
鈥淚 did not realize it was a competition, nobody told me this. I was just talking to someone at my poster and then I turned around and there were three judges standing in front of me with clipboards,鈥 Mahorney said.
She has enjoyed having a lot of autonomy over her research but also feels grateful that she can ask for guidance from Knudsen when she needs it.
鈥淚 really like Andrew (Knudsen); I鈥檝e had him for past classes and so I already knew him in general, but then actually being able to work with him in a low-stress environment was super fun. He was a very chill professor.鈥
Knudsen said Mahorney succeeded at the conference because she put in the work.
鈥淜atie did an amazing job preparing for the poster presentation,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he spent all summer fully engaged with this project, and her deep understanding of how the SLUG garden is pulling CO2聽out of the atmosphere is awesome.鈥
Mahorney is continuing the project as her聽聽and will declare it as an聽聽in Spring Term. When she graduates, she plans to pursue her passion for research in graduate school.
KATIE MAHORNEY
Class Year: 2022
Major:聽geosciences and environmental studies
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Activities: Geoscience research, SLUG