Science for Alaska talks and events announced

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Jan. 16, 2025

The TVGeophysical Institute will host free public science talks over the next few weeks, highlighting new climate research technology, an Alaska earthquake mystery solution, tidewater glaciers in Alaska and Greenland and a recent Bering Sea journey aboard the research vessel Sikuliaq.

Graduate student researcher Emily Graham presents her research during the 2025 lecture series.
Photo by LJ Evans
Graduate student researcher Emily Graham presents her research during the 2025 lecture series.

For over 30 years, the Geophysical Institute has hosted the Science for Alaska talk series as one of its largest public outreach efforts. The series provides the public with information about current research from scientists with expertise across Alaska. 

To celebrate the start of the series, Science for Alaska is offering a free K-12 portable planetarium event and a fun evening of flash talk science at the TV Pub. These events are in-person only.

  • Tuesday, Jan. 27: An Afternoon of Family Science, 3-5 p.m., Nordale Education Center, 397 Hamilton Ave. — Visitors can stargaze inside a portable planetarium and learn about Alaska science research. joins the Geophysical Institute for exploration and hands-on activities at this .
  • Thursday, Jan. 29: Science for Alaska Kickoff, 6:30-8 p.m., TV Pub, 1731 S. Chandalar Drive — The kickoff is a of several short, engaging science talks covering space physics, the Denali fault, fieldwork in Antarctica, earthquake early warning in Alaska and wildfire mapping. All ages welcome.

The 2026 Science for Alaska lecture series begins Tuesday, Feb. 3, and runs every Tuesday through Feb. 24. Talks start at 7 p.m. in the TV Schaible Auditorium, 1764 Tanana Loop, and will also be and the TV and Geophysical Institute Facebook pages. On-campus parking is always free after 5 p.m. Presenters will answer questions after each talk.

Here are the 2026 Tuesday lectures and dates:

  • Feb. 3: Martin Stuefer and Roozbeh Rajabi“Climate Science, AI and Hyperspectral Imaging Reveal a Changing Arctic”
  • Feb. 10: Carl Tape“Mystery Solved: Revealing the 1912 Denali Earthquake”
  • Feb. 17: Martin Truffer and Amy Jenson“Across Seconds and Centuries: Tidewater Glacier Change in Alaska and Greenland”
  • Feb. 24: Chris Maio and the ACTION Team“Working Together on the Bering Sea: Coastal Hazard Science Powered by Communities”

Lecture recordings can be viewed on the or the Geophysical Institute in March after the series concludes.

For more about the lectures and videos of past talks, visit or the Geophysical Institute .

The 2026 event series flyer is .

The 2026 Science for Alaska events are sponsored by the Triplehorn family, Lifewater Engineering Co. and the TV Geophysical Institute.

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