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Alan Werner
Contact:
Al Werner
Clapp Laboratory, Room 321
413-538-2134

Education:

  • University of Colorado, Ph.D.
  • Southern Illinois University, M.S.
  • Grand Valley State University, B.S.

Joined MHC: 1988

"Working with students—in the field and in the lab—is the best part of my job. Students, because they are not burdened by years of 'conventional wisdom,' are often able to see research problems from a fresh, unbiased perspective. To relive the sense of discovery with students and to assist them with figuring out their academic lives is fantastically rewarding."

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Home > Academics > Faculty > Faculty Profiles > Alan Werner

Alan Werner

Professor of Geology

Specialization: Environmental geology; climate change; surface processes; Quaternary geology

"The answers are in the mud!" says Alan Werner. "As a kid I was told 'not to play in the mud,' and now I make a living doing just that." Werner is referring to his fieldwork, which he and his students conduct in remote locations—from Alaska to the Canadian Arctic to Spitsbergen, an island in the Arctic Sea—bringing recovered sediment cores back to the laboratory for analysis. "Lakes, in many ways, are ideal repositories of past environmental change," says Werner. "They preserve long and continuous records, and organic material in the lake mud can be dated using the radiocarbon dating method."

A specialist in glacial geology, environmental geology, and climate change, as well as a groundwater geologist, Werner is former chair of the College's environmental studies program and the Department of Earth and Environment. He continues to teach a course in environmental geology that explores the impact of natural events, such as floods and earthquakes, and of human mismanagement, such as acid rain and the greenhouse effect, on the environment.

Werner's research focuses on past environmental change. "Although we tend to think that planet Earth is stable and unchanging, in fact, the geologic record indicates that profound changes have taken place on a variety of timescales," says Werner. He studies records of climate change to document the nature and timing of climate events in various locations in the Arctic.

Werner is a frequent contributor to scientific publications and is the principal investigator of a $507,000 grant (pending) from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to study climate change in the high Arctic. Along with several Mount Holyoke colleagues, Werner received a $57,000 grant from the NSF for a project integrating stable isotope geochemistry into the geoscience curriculum.

News Links:

"Questioning Authority: Al Werner on Climate Change," Office of Communications, February 9, 2007

"College Geologist Helps Town of South Hadley Look for a Reliable Source of Drinking Water," College Street Journal, January 10, 1997

"Pipeline to Alaska: Feinberg '00, Werner, and Alums Study Glacier Sediment in Alaskan Wilderness,"
College Street Journal, October 8, 1999

"It's a Bird! It's a Plane! It's a Weather Station!"
College Street Journal, January 8, 1999

Copyright © 2007 Mount Holyoke College • 50 College Street • South Hadley, Massachusetts 01075. To contact the College, call 413-538-2000.
This page maintained by the Office of Communications. Last modified on February 9, 2007.