In-Person Lecture: From Diatoms to DNA
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In-Person Lecture: From Diatoms to DNA

  • ALL AGES

Join us March 19 at 7 pm for a lecture on how lake mud holds clues to lakes' pasts.

By National Museum of the Great Lakes

Date and time

Wednesday, March 19 · 7 - 8:30pm EDT.

Location

National Museum of the Great Lakes

1701 Front Street Toledo, OH 43605

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes
  • ALL AGES
  • Free venue parking

Join us for our 2025 Spring Lecture Series presented by Larry & Karen Bettcher. Offered as a hybrid event, participants can choose when registering to take part in-person at the museum or online via Zoom.

📅 Date: Wednesday, March 19, 2025

🕖 Time: 7:00 PM

📍 Location: Join in-person at the museum or online via Zoom

💵 Cost: Free (Registration required)

Lakes hold a hidden history beneath their surfaces, preserved in layers of sediment that accumulate over time. In this lecture, Dr. Trisha Spanbauer will explore how interdisciplinary research is uncovering the ecological and evolutionary changes that have shaped aquatic ecosystems. By analyzing fossil and DNA records from ancient lakes in South America and Africa, as well as younger lakes in the Midwest and Rocky Mountains, Dr. Spanbauer and her team reveal how environmental disturbances have influenced lake ecosystems over time.

This lecture is free, but registration is required. Donations are always happily accepted.


About the Speaker:

Dr. Trisha Spanbauer joined the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Toledo in 2019, and she is currently a resident faculty member at the Lake Erie Center. Prior to becoming a professor, Dr. Spanbauer received a BFA in Visual Art and Art History from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a Ph.D. in Geology and Biology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Research in her lab is broadly interested in ecological and evolutionary change over a broad range of timescales, with a specialization in using fossils and genetic material from sediment archives to understand global environmental change.

Frequently asked questions

Is this at the museum?

Yes, you can attend the lecture at the museum or online via Zoom. This registration is for in-person attendance. Find the Zoom registration on our primary page.

Organized by

The National Museum of the Great Lakes is located on the banks of the Maumee River in Toledo, Ohio.  Our goal to to preserve and make known the history of the Great Lakes.

Free