IRIS Consortium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IRIS (Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology[1]) was a university research consortium dedicated to exploring the Earth's interior through the collection and distribution of seismographic data. IRIS programs contributed to scholarly research, education, earthquake hazard mitigation, and the verification of a Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty. Support for IRIS came from the National Science Foundation, other federal agencies, universities, and private foundations. IRIS supported five major components, the Data Management Center (DMC[2]), the Portable Array Seismic Studies of the Continental Lithosphere (PASSCAL[3]), the Global Seismographic Network (GSN[4]), the Transportable Array (USARRAY[5]), and the Education and Public Outreach Program (EPO[6]). IRIS maintained a Corporate Office in Washington, D.C.
Founded | October 1984; 39 years ago (1984-10) |
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Type | 501(c)(3) |
Location | |
Services | Research, Education |
Members | 290 (2018) |
Official languages | English |
Key people | Robert Woodward, President; Richard C. Aster, Chair of the Board of Directors |
Website | www |
IRIS's Education and Public Outreach Program offered animations, videos, lessons, software, posters, and fact sheets to help teachers and the general public learn more about seismology and earth science and understand it better. The goal is to get more people interested in careers in geophysics.
IRIS is listed in the Registry of Research Data Repositories re3data.org.[7]
On January 1, 2023, IRIS merged with UNAVCO to form EarthScope Consortium.[8]