Home |
|
 |
 |
Enlarge ImageCollecting lava from active Kilauea flow, Hawaii, near ocean entry, 2000. (Photo by Al Hofmann)
 |
Enlarge ImageWaterfall on upper Muliolo Stream, north coast of Savai?i, Samoa. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageOn beach near Si?u Point, Tau Island, Samoa. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageSouth coast of Ta'u Island, Samoa, from top of Mt. Lata. Note two perched benches from past flank failures. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageTisa and Candyman at the Barefoot Bar, Alega Beach, Tutuila. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageStan teaching a day of geoscience at the high school, Ta?u Island, Samoa, 2004. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageMatt Jackson, geoscience day at the high school, Ta?u Island, Samoa. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageStan inspecting ankaramite dike, Maga Point, Olosega Island, Samoa. (Photo by Rhea Workman)
 |
Enlarge ImageUmu in Fitiuta, Ta?u Island, Samoa. (Photo by Matt Jackson)
 |
Enlarge ImageRhea Workman in cloud forest on top of Lata Mountain, Ta?u Island. (Photo by Matt Jackson)
 |
Enlarge ImageVailulu?u Tuimanua, grandson of Tisa, named for the active underwater volcano at the east end of the Samoan hotspot chain. (Photo by Stan Hart)
 |
Enlarge ImageADCP deployed by PISCES IV submersible in the NW breach of summit crater, Vailulu?u volcano, Samoa, March 2005. (Photo by Stan Hart)
 |
Enlarge ImageBathymetric map of the summit crater of Vailulu?u, showing Nafanua, the new volcanic cone that grew between 2001 and 2005. (Photo by Stan Hart)
 |
Enlarge ImageSome of Stan?s students and post-docs at his 70th birthday dinner, San Francisco 2005. (Photo by Al Hofmann)
 |
Enlarge ImageStan before entering PISCES IV to dive into summit crater of Vailulu?u volcano, March 2005. (Photo by Hubert Staudigel)
 |
Enlarge ImageStan emerging into cloud forest on top of Mt. Lata, Ta?u Island, Samoa. (Photo by Matt Jackson)
 |
Enlarge ImageFalmouth Road Race, 2006. (Photo by Pam Hart)
 |
Enlarge ImageNorth side of Ta?u Island, Samoa, from the air, 1999. Note the landslides that are beginning to sculpt this young shield volcano. (Photo by Stan Hart)
 |
Enlarge ImageFrom the air, looking north to Ofu Island (left) and Olosega Island (right), Samoa. Once a single island like Ta?u, landslides and flank failures have sculpted this older volcano into two islands. An ankaramite dike collected on the north side of the small peak just west of the waterway between Ofu and Olosega gives the highest 3He/4He isotope value in Samoa. (Photo by Bob Greschke)
 |
Enlarge Image?Eel City? on top of Nafanua, the new cone in the summit crater of Vailulu?u volcano, Samoa. (Photo by Stan Hart, taken from the PISCES IV submersible, March 2005)
 |
Rhea Workman, geoscience day at the high school, Ta?u Island, Samoa. (Photo by Stan Hart)
 |
Enlarge ImageHigh school students after geoscience class, Ta?u High School, 2004. (Photo by Stan Hart)
|
 |
| Related Multimedia |
|
 | Stanley R. Hart
Senior Scientist Emeritus
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Geology and Geophysics Department
Clark 435B, MS 25
Woods Hole, MA 02543
508-289-2837 (office at work)
508-548-1656 (office at home)
508-457-2175 (fax)
http://www.whoi.edu/sbl/liteSite.do?litesiteid=20473
Email: shart@whoi.edu
Research Interests
Study of the evolution and dynamics of the earth's mantle
using trace element and isotopic techniques; study of the
long-term control of seawater chemistry as a result of ocean
crust-seawater interactions; experimental measurements of
fundamental geochemical properties such as silicate mineral/melt
partition coefficients and solid state diffusion rates
|
|