Margie Turrin and Dave Porter Originally presented 5 Mar 2016 at Lamont and 9 Apr 2016 at the Morningside Campus Development of the Polar Explorer: Sea Level app funded by the NSF under Cooperative Agreement No. DUE-1239783. Workshop funded in part by NOAA Award...
“Impact of CO2 on the Earth’s Environment: Science behind the Paris Climate Accord” with Taro Takahashi (19 Mar 2016)
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Marine and Terrestrial Biology, Ocean and Atmospheric Physics, Sustainable Future, Uncategorized
Originally presented 19 Mar 2016 Workshop funded in part by NOAA Award Number NA15NOS0080223 through the National Ocean Service We are honored to welcome back to E2C Dr. Taro Takahashi, the Ewing Lamont Research Professor and one of the world’s most prominent...
Studying phytoplankton adaptations to different marine environments” with Solange Duhamel & Andy Juhl
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Marine and Terrestrial Biology, Sustainable Future
Originally presented 7 May 2016 Abstract: Phytoplankton are microscopic plants that float in the water and use sunlight, CO2 and nutrients to grow: like trees on land, they are primary producers at the base of the food web. They are essential to life on Earth...
“Glaciers in the Andes and Changing Climates” with Carly Peltier
by admin | Jul 20, 2023 | Climate Change, Paleoclimatology, Polar Research, Sustainable Future
Carly Peltier is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. She earned her B.A. from Mount Holyoke College in 2015 where she double majored in Geology and Economics. She is interested in studying glacier and climate changes of the past in...
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...