Teen SciCafe: Microfossils and Big Clues to Reconstructing the Past

Part of Teen SciCafe

Saturday, May 6, 2023

Brightly colored, oval shaped structure with multiple chambers against multicolor background. 3D-printed replicas can help researchers investigate the structure of foram shells.
Denis Finnin/© AMNH
Understanding the past is key to understanding the present—and tiny fossils can help.

Join Teen SciCafe and Oregon State Ph.D. student Saray Sanchez to explore how scientists are using microfossils of single-celled marine organisms called foraminifera, which are found in ocean sediment cores, to reconstruct past ocean temperatures—and how these ancient artifacts of the past can help us understand how ice ages end. 

Sanchez, who is specializing in millennial-scale paleoclimatology, will share her research in geoscience and answer your questions about why microfossils are sensitive indicators of environmental change.

To learn more about foraminifera in the Museum’s collections, read this blog post and watch this video:

Adults are welcome but MUST be accompanied by a Teen (Ages 13–19).

The American Museum of Natural History gratefully acknowledges Amazon for its sponsorship of the Teen SciCafe series.

Amazon logo.