The field trip on the first Friday of the program enabled the students to see and learn about the northern Outer Banks. Stops included Jennette’s Pier, Nags Head Woods, the US Army Corps of Engineers Duck Research Facility and the Kitty Hawk erosion hot spot. At these locations the class heard from experts on the location – Thanks to them! The last stop was to climb the largest sand dune east of the Mississippi River – Jockey’s Ridge State Park.
Welcome to the web site for Sediment and Solute Transport on Rivers and Margins (SSTORM) Research Group! Reide Corbett and J.P. Walsh from East Carolina University and the UNC Coastal Studies Institute lead the team.
Check out our research in/on wetlands, estuaries, barrier islands, shelves and groundwater.
Friday, May 22, 2015
Thursday, May 21, 2015
TAs for the Summester
The Summester at the Coast program was fortunate to have three multi-talented TAs, including Nick Kelly (left) and CJ Cornette (right) who dabble in controlled burns. Luke Stevens was the third TA – he was busy working!
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Summester 2015 Starts!
And we’re off! … the Summester at the Coast 2015 started May 20th. We have a great group of 13 students this year from schools across the eastern US, from Indiana (Earlham College), Ohio (Oberlin College), U. Penn., to almost Canada (St. Lawrence Univ.) and south to Georgia (Georgia Southern). Of course, we have number of students from NC schools, including ECU, Elon, NCSU, UNC Charlotte and Davidson. The first class exercise involved mapping the UNC CSI canal by kayak.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Researchers Take MOCC Training for Boat Operations
Several researchers from ECU and UNC CSI fought fires, tied knots, trailered boats and fired flares in the process of becoming certified to operate boats for coastal science work. C.J. Cornette, Luke Stevens, Keith Garmire and J.P. Walsh from ECU Geological Sciences and CSI's Coastal Processes program and Stephanie O'Daly from the CSI Estuarine Ecology program were trained by John Woods (ECU Geological Sciences) and Mike Baker (ECU Dive & Water Safety). The intensive class involves online reading, hands-on activities, boating and exams. After some rescue review at the Minges ECU pool, the instructors and trainees braved well-below freezing temperatures to practice skills. Thankfully, the instructors were clear and informative, and the students were attentive and quick learners. Boating activities will occur in March at CSI.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone
Monday, February 2, 2015
Bonjour Emeric!: French Student Visits the Lab
There is a new face (with a funny accent) walking around the halls
of the UNC Coastal Studies Institute. Emeric Bourineau is a French MS student from
the Université de La Rochelle. He is here to work with the Coastal
Processes program (i.e., the SSTORM Lab) for a few months. Although
he has recently analyzed all the tide gauge data from the NC coast, his
research here is just getting started.
But he’s already enjoyed some American traditions, including the
Superbowl, a barbecue dinner and craft beer at the OBX Brew Station. At a recent gathering at Trio, we even got
him taste some California wines, but not surprisingly, he preferred the
Bordeaux vintages. He looks forward to
seeing and learning more of the NC coast and its people; please stop in to say “Salut!”
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