Current Year Schedule
GSM seminars with slide show presentations are free and open to the public. They are presented by leading professionals in their fields and are aimed at learners from high school to adult. A question-and-answer session follows each seminar. The labs, also free and open to the public, allow a hands-on learning experience and demonstrate the ideas and principles of geology and earth science. Live lectures and labs require no registration; just show up a few minutes early on the evening of the lecture.
Click on date of any seminar for attendance information and other details. For a printable version of our schedule of seminars and labs, click here.
Except as noted, live lectures during fall 2024 are Mondays at 7:00 PM CT on the University of Minnesota campus, Keller Hall, Room 3-230. The address is 200 Union St. SE, Minneapolis MN. A lecture with (V) following its title is an online virtual lecture. For these, free registration is required by non-members; the instructions are supplied with the lecture description.
Our schedule is planned over 6 months in advance, so changes may occur. Always check this website shortly before each lecture for the latest seminar information.
Winter weather will come and snow might impact our lectures. The GSM will make any decision about cancelling or postponing a lecture due to inclement weather no later than 3:00 PM the day of the lecture. This information will be posted on the GSM home page (http://www.gsmn.org/). So check our home page shortly before each lecture in case there is a cancellation or a last-minute change. Also, we will e‐mail lecture postponement and cancellation information to our members.
Past seminars marked with * were recorded and the recording is available on the Geological Society of Minnesota YouTube channel. Subscribe to this channel for updates.
Seminar Details
Seminar Lab Date: October 28, 2024
Seminar Lab Subject: Groundwater Governance in the Great Lakes States—from Well-Cobbled to Equitable and Sustainable?
Seminar Lab Presenter: Carrie Jennings, Ph.D., Research and Policy Director, Freshwater Society
Seminar Lab Location:
In-person only at U of Minnesota, Keller Hall, Room 3-230
Lecture start time 7:00 PM CT.
Seminar Lab Detail:
Summary: Groundwater is a crucially important but often overlooked resource in the Great Lakes region. As a common-pool resource, the region’s aquifers should have a well-structured set of governing principles to guide their sustainable and equitable use. We ask, “but do they?”
We assessed hydrogeology knowledge, legal structures, and the institutions in six Great Lakes states including the tribes that share their geography. We conclude that the current structure, cobbled together over decades in response to different kinds of stressors and crises, does not adequately provide for a participatory and inclusive groundwater management system. It is not founded in adequate technical knowledge everywhere, and it is not coordinated around local, shared aquifers. Thus it is not constructed to best connect water users to the region’s future prosperity.
An incredible resource lies beneath our feet and connects us all. Freshwater, with the support of the Joyce Foundation, is working to bring attention and care to groundwater for our shared prosperity and for generations to come.
Biography: Carrie has been Research and Policy Director at Freshwater since 2016 after having been a field geologist for 24 years, 22 of those with the Minnesota Geological Survey and two with the DNR, Division of Lands and Minerals. She also served as the science reports lead for the County Geologic Atlas program at the DNR for 2 years. She has been Adjunct Graduate Faculty in the Dept. of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the U of M for 30 years. She applies her understanding of glacial geology and landscape evolution to shape policy and technical approaches for managing surface water and groundwater, avoiding hazards, and using resources wisely.