Defining Research and Teaching Priorities that Could be Advanced Through
a Near-Surface Geophysics Center
Abstract
The National Science Foundation provided support to the American
Geophysical Union (AGU) to engage its relevant community and help
clarify the need for a Near-Surface Geophysics (NSG) Center and identify
how it could advance key science questions, provide benefits for
society, and develop the geophysical workforce of the future. This
report synthesizes the broad input from the community. The listed
authors represent the Steering Committee, led by Sarah Kruse and Xavier
Comas, and AGU staff leads. They were responsible for most of the
editing and connective writing. The major conclusions are: ● The
capability and importance of NSG is expanding rapidly, and NSG is
providing key science and knowledge to many specific scientific
challenges in diverse disciplines–from ecology and anthropology to
hydrology, oceanography, cryosphere science, soil and critical zone
science, and more. ● This has been thanks to diverse new instruments and
approaches, expanded monitoring, improved resolution, interoperable data
sets, and new computing power and approaches, among other developments.
● As a result, advancing NSG is critical to addressing many societal
challenges at local to global scales. Human society depends on and
interacts with the NSG environment in deep and diverse ways at all
scales. ● Despite these developments, integration of NSG approaches and
awareness of these across related disciplines are not nearly robust
enough for these needs. ● Major challenges include providing equipment
and training around its use, developing and deploying new equipment and
sensors, developing interoperable data, and developing computation
techniques. ● In particular, educating both current researchers and
developing an NSG-enabled workforce is a major challenge. ● Integrating
education with societal and scientific challenges provides a great
opportunity and means to expand inclusivity and diversity in the Earth
sciences and to address climate justice and equity challenges. ● Thus
there was a strong consensus for support of an NSG Center designed to
address these challenges and needs and to foster convergent science,
provide broad and hands-on educational training, and engage communities
and the public meaningfully. ● We were not charged with envisioning the
specific model for a Center—and indeed emphasized that the term
“Center” was generic and did not necessarily imply that these efforts
were envisioned to be in one location–but note that NSF is supporting
important complementary facilities include the new EarthScope Consortium
combining IRIS and UNAVCO, NCALM, and CTEMPS. ● In sum, we strongly
encourage the NSF to take the next step in considering the best
implementation model for a NSG Center that addresses these needs,
enables these opportunities, and leverages and complements existing
efforts.