Originally presented 22 Oct 2016 (Morningside Campus)Support in part by National Science Foundation Award #1502889 Windblown dust plays important roles in influencing and recording climate change. In the atmosphere, dust contributes to the...
“Polar Ice Sheets and Sea Level Rise” with Indrani Das
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Polar Research, Remote Sensing
Indrani Das c.v. My research interests are very broad- ranging from Glaciology to Atmospheric Physics. I study ice surface and basal processes and ice-atmosphere interactions on ice sheets and mountain glaciers. I have worked...
Nathan Lenssen: “How Do We Know the Temperature of the Earth?”
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Remote Sensing, Sustainable Future, Uncategorized, Using Data Sets
The annual global mean temperature anomaly is an important and highly publicized index of climate change. Changes in the global mean temperature are a result of an energy imbalance in the Earth system. Over the past 150 years, human emission of greenhouse gases has...
“Sea Surface Temperature from ships to satellites”
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Paleoclimatology, Using Data Sets
Alexey Kaplan Youtube video of this session Oct 16, 2021 Sea Surface temperature (SST) is a critical variable for analyses of climate variability and trends, for seasonal climate prediction, for understanding the impact of climate and environmental...
“Earth’s Oceans during the Last Ice Age” with Dr. Jerry McManus
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Paleoclimatology, Scientific Ocean Drilling, Uncategorized
Originally presented 15 Jan 2022 Supported by NSF Grants https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1502889&HistoricalAwards=false https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1635019&HistoricalAwards=false...