Latest News

Latest News

Tessa Hill Named Associate Dean of Research and Graduate Education

Professor Tessa Hill has been named associate dean of research and graduate education in the College of Letters and Science at UC Davis. In the position, Hill will facilitate and support cross-departmental and cross-college research initiatives, oversee contracts and grants, and develop...READ MORE

Did Dinosaurs Use Their Forelimbs for Social Signaling?

In December 2025, Russian scientists published an analysis of a 67-million-year-old dinosaur fossil that was found in the Gobi Desert in 1979. The fossil specimen belonged to a small, two-legged dinosaur named Manipulonyx reshetovi, a part of the Alvarezsauridae family...READ MORE

UC Davis Alumni Launch Geology Coding Bootcamp

Geology provides a language for understanding the Earth. Stories from the planet’s past are locked in the rocks and landscape. But others are hard to reveal, hidden in troves of data. No one knows this better than UC Davis Ph.D. alums and married...READ MORE

Tessa Hill Selected for AGU Local Science Partners 2026 Cohort

Professor Tessa Hill has been selected to join the 2026 cohort of the American Geophysical Union’s (AGU) Local Science Partners Program, a national initiative that strengthens the role of science in public decision-making. Chosen from a highly competitive applicant pool...READ MORE

Investigating Carbon Cycling in Tropical Mangrove Estuaries

Anchored in Cameroon’s Wouri Estuary, where rivers, tides, and ships converge, Claris Sunjo leans over the side of her boat. She’s twenty-four hours into collecting water from a tidal creek, a narrow channel connected to the Wouri Estuary system, asking a question scientists...READ MORE

Methane and Climate Change: Why This Greenhouse Gas Matters More Than You Think

When oceanographer Tessa Hill was asked to join the Climate Crisis Advisory Group (CCAG) as an advisor, she was surprised by the reason. The global group, formed in 2021 with the vision of acting as a bridge between the latest climate science and policymakers, was interested...READ MORE

AGU Announces the Louise H. Kellogg Mid-Career Medal

The American Geophysical Union (AGU) has announced the creation of the Louise H. Kellogg Mid-Career Medal, an award recognizing scientists whose interdisciplinary work advances our understanding of how planets evolve. The Union Medal honors the legacy of Louise...READ MORE

The Carbon Dioxide Climate Debt

For more than half a century, from a remote monitoring station atop Hawaii’s dormant volcano Mauna Kea, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has continuously logged levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide. In June 2024, researchers carrying out...READ MORE

Walk Through California’s Geological Past at the UC Davis Rock Garden

The temperatures have dipped, the skies are increasingly gray, and the foliage is shifting colors and falling. While the summer months are behind us, one garden on campus remains unchanged: The California Rock Garden. Surrounding the Earth and Physical Sciences Building, the...READ MORE

Rocks on Faults Can Heal Following Seismic Movement

Earthquake faults deep in the Earth can glue themselves back together following a seismic event, according to a new study led by researchers at the University of California, Davis. The work, published Nov. 19 in Science Advances and supported by grants from the National Science...READ MORE

UC Davis Study Reveals How Earth’s Greatest Extinction Really Happened

Around 252 million years ago, the Earth experienced its largest mass extinction. Known as the “Great Dying,” this cataclysmic event wiped out more than 81% of marine species and 70% of life on land. Currently, the prevailing theory is that the extinction both in the oceans and on...READ MORE