Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo works in the Reichardt Building petrology lab.
Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo works in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-134.jpg
Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo works in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-130.jpg
Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo works in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-121.jpg
Research assistant professor Jessica Larsen takes a break while working in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-115.jpg
Research assistant professor Jessica Larsen takes a break while working in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-119.jpg
Research Assistant Professor Jessica Larsen, at right, operates the valve while volcanology graduate student Rebecca deGraffenreid uses water to cool down a rod which contains volcanic remnants after it was pulled from a furnace in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-101.jpg
Research Assistant Professor Jessica Larsen, at right, operates the valve while volcanology graduate student Rebecca deGraffenreid uses water to cool down a rod which contains volcanic remnants after it was pulled from a furnace in the Reichardt Building petrology lab. Filename: AAR-16-4828-088.jpg
Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo pulls a rod containing volcanic remnants from a furnace in the Reichardt Building petrology lab under the watchful gaze of Research Assistant Professor Jessica Larsen. Filename: AAR-16-4828-063.jpg
Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo pulls a rod containing volcanic remnants from a furnace in the Reichardt Building petrology lab under the watchful gaze of Research Assistant Professor Jessica Larsen.
Ph.D. candidate Amanda Lindoo pulls a rod containing volcanic remnants from a furnace in the Reichardt Building petrology lab under the watchful gaze of Research Assistant Professor Jessica Larsen. Filename: AAR-16-4828-061.jpg
Volcanology graduate student Rebecca deGraffenreid removes a rod containing volcanic remnants from a furnace in the Reichardt Building petrology lab.
Undergraduate geology major Kailyn Davis hears from research assistant professor Jeff Benowitz in a Reichardt Building rock lab. Filename: AAR-14-4372-115.jpg
Undergraduate geology major Kailyn Davis works in a Reichardt Buiding lab selecting volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for radiometric dating. Filename: AAR-14-4372-098.jpg
Undergraduate geology major Pat Terhune slices samples on the rock saw in a Reichardt Buiding lab. Filename: AAR-14-4372-110.jpg
Undergraduate geology major Pat Terhune slices samples on the rock saw in a Reichardt Buiding lab. Filename: AAR-14-4372-107.jpg
Research Assistant Professor Dr. Benowitz, left, works with undergraduate Patrick Terhune selecting volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for radiometric dating. Filename: AAR-14-4372-089.jpg
Research Assistant Professor Dr. Benowitz, left, works with undergraduate Patrick Terhune selecting volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for radiometric dating. Filename: AAR-14-4372-088.jpg
Undergraduate geology majors Patrick Terhune and Kailyn Davis select volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for geochronology dating in a Reichardt Building lab. Filename: AAR-14-4372-064.jpg
Undergraduate geology majors Patrick Terhune, left, and Kailyn Davis, right, work with research assistant professor Jeff Benowitz selecting volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for geochronology dating. Filename: AAR-14-4372-084.jpg
Research Assistant Professor Dr. Benowitz, left, works with undergraduate Patrick Terhune selecting volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for radiometric dating. Filename: AAR-14-4372-087.jpg
Undergraduate geology majors Patrick Terhune and Kailyn Davis select volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for geochronology dating in a Reichardt Building lab. Filename: AAR-14-4372-078.jpg
Undergraduate geology majors Patrick Terhune and Kailyn Davis select volcanic rock samples from central Mexico for geochronology dating in a Reichardt Building lab. Filename: AAR-14-4372-076.jpg
Undergraduates Pat Terhune, left, and Kailyn Davis work in the Geophysical Institute's geochronology lab. They're using a six-watt argon laser to de-gas rock samples for isotopic measurements on a mass spectrometer. Filename: AAR-14-4372-037.jpg
Undergraduate Kailyn Davis, left, works with Research Assistant Professor Jeff Benowitz in the Geophysical Institute's geochronology lab. They're using a six-watt argon laser to de-gas rock samples for isotopic measurements on a mass spectrometer. Filename: AAR-14-4372-028.jpg
Undergraduate Kailyn Davis, left, works with Research Assistant Professor Jeff Benowitz in the Geophysical Institute's geochronology lab. They're using a six-watt argon laser to de-gas rock samples for isotopic measurements on a mass spectrometer. Filename: AAR-14-4372-016.jpg
A visitor gets to pilor a robotic vehicle during CNSM's Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-166.jpg
Student volunteers man the tables during the CNSM Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-157.jpg
A visitor plays at the popular Stream Table during CNSM's Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-137.jpg
A visitor plays at the popular Stream Table during CNSM's Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-149.jpg
A visitor to CNSM's Science Potpourri decorates a pet rock at one of the various tables April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-107.jpg
Student volunteers man the tables during the CNSM Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-065.jpg
A visitor to CNSM's Science Potpourri examines some fresh goo he picked up at one of the various tables April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-073.jpg
Visitors to CNSM's Science Potpourri experiment with a virtual reality modeling sandbox which allows them to experience various geospatial concepts April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-059.jpg
Visitors to CNSM's Science Potpourri experiment with a virtual reality modeling sandbox which allows them to experience various geospatial concepts April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-061.jpg
Student volunteers man the tables during the CNSM Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-038.jpg
Physics associate professor Channon Price volunteers at a table during the CNSM Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-043.jpg
Professor Rainer Newberry makes sure the gum drops are toothpicks are ready for assembly before the Science Popourri opens April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-021.jpg
Student volunteers man the tables during the CNSM Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-025.jpg
CNSM Dean Paul Layer gets some help from GeoFORCE program coordinator Anne Rittgers setting up the popular Stream Table before the 2015 Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-006.jpg
Hild Peters, right, executive officer with UAF's College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, poses with her crew before opening the Science Potpourri April 11 in the Reichardt Building. Filename: LIF-15-4507-012.jpg
A supercooled superconductor floats below a circular rail made up of powerful magnets as Professor David Newman demonstrates the "super cool" effect of quantum levitation to undergraduate physics majors Khan Hawe and Hannah Brink in the Reichardt Building. Filename: AAR-14-4345-202.jpg
A supercooled superconductor floats above a circular rail made up of powerful magnets as Professor David Newman demonstrates the "super cool" effect of quantum levitation to undergraduate physics major Khan Hawe in the Reichardt Building. Filename: AAR-14-4345-167.jpg