06/22/2026
Rice Ph.D. student, Kelsey Murphy, is mapping the future of the Mississippi River by decoding its past. Using climate models and centuries of data, her work reveals how rising emissions and changing landscapes are driving extreme floods and droughts, delivering the evidence needed to safeguard the region’s water, food, and economy in an uncertain climate.
Read more about her research: https://tinyurl.com/mpm7d6u3
06/15/2026
Thanks to the CPO2H, Rice’s Creative Ventures Fund, and the CLEVER Planets grant, EEPS hosted an Inner Solar System Workshop last month.
This event brought together approximately 80 researchers from across the U.S. and Europe to Rice University to share research and host discussions on:
🪐Solar system formation and evolution
🪐Accretion of terrestrial planets
🪐Planetary differentiation
🪐Volatile delivery to planets
🪐Geochemistry & Cosmochemistry of astromaterials
🪐Interior-surface exchanges through time
Read more: https://news.rice.edu/news/2026/inner-solar-system-workshop-creates-space-cross-disciplinary-collaboration
06/06/2026
Learn more about the Houston Meteorite analysis:
https://news.rice.edu/news/2026/heated-history-houston-meteorite
📷️ Featuring: Neeraja Chinchalkar, Lunar and Planetary Institute Scientist and Bidong Zhang, Rice Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Science
05/28/2026
For Rice's associate professor, Dr. Sylvia Dee, understanding Earth’s past is the key to preparing for its future. By combining climate models with centuries-old natural records, her work uncovers how rainfall, temperatures and extreme weather are shifting in a warming world. From El Niño dynamics to the impacts of extreme heat on public health, Dee’s research strengthens climate predictions and supports communities facing climate risks today.
Rice University Rice University - School of Natural Sciences
05/25/2026
Can climate variability influence the risk of armed conflict?
Research exploring this question was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on May 11th. The study by Rice statistics doctoral student Tyler Bagwell, with climate scientist Dr. Sylvia Dee and statistician Dr. Frederi Viens, and support from Rice undergraduate students, Divya Saikumar and Anna Stravato uses high-resolution data and empirical modeling to examine how large-scale climate patterns shape the probability of civil conflict and war
Read more: https://news.rice.edu/news/2026/climate-patterns-may-shape-where-violent-conflict-risks-are-amplified-rice-study-finds
05/22/2026
“Being able to transition to Rice with a project that will directly support the greater Houston communities is incredibly exciting,” Hoffman said. “Using a multifaceted lens, we’ll be able to build models that truly help to increase resiliency and improve flood and sea level responses across the Gulf Coast.”
Read more: https://news.rice.edu/news/2026/new-rice-professor-leads-project-build-more-climate-resilient-gulf-coast
Rice University Rice University - School of Natural Sciences