LSU Geology & Geophysics

LSU Geology & Geophysics

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LSU was then known as the
Louisiana State Seminary of Learning, and was located in Pineville, LA. During the
Civil War, all teaching was suspended, but following the war, on October 2, 1865,
classes resumed under the direction of a new president, David F. President Boyd was very interested in geology and maintained his own mineral and fossil collection. On October 15, 1869, the Louisiana State Sem

Photos from LSU Research's post 06/11/2026
06/04/2026

Deep beneath the Tyrrhenian Sea, scientists recovered dark mantle rocks from Earth’s interior, but cutting through them were pale granite intrusions, rocks more commonly found in continents than beneath the seafloor.

That strange mix became a rare window into one of Earth’s most dramatic processes: the birth of a new ocean basin.
Like a built-in clock and thermometer, the granites preserved evidence of how a massive fault rapidly pulled deep Earth material upward as continents stretched apart millions of years ago.

New research from LSU geologist Eirini Poulaki and collaborators published in .
Learn more: https://www.lsu.edu/science/news/2026/05/poulaki-sciadvances.php

LSU Research
LSU Geology & Geophysics

PBS News Hour | Season 2025 | August 8, 2025 - PBS News Hour full episode 08/13/2025

PBS News Hour | Season 2025 | August 8, 2025 - PBS News Hour full episode August 8, 2025 - PBS News Hour full episode

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