Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Changes of the Greenland Cryosphere Workshop

Workshop: Changes of the Greenland Cryosphere

Location: Nuuk, Greenland, August 25-27

Web site: www.space.dtu.dk/nuuk2009

Arranged by: National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark.

Scientific Committee:
R. Dietriech, Germany; P. Gogineni, USA; W. Krabill, USA; K. Steffen, USA; A. Ahlstrøm, D. Dahl-Jensen, R. Forsberg, Denmark; S. Rysgaard, K. Hornbech-Svensen, Greenland.

The CGC workshop is an interdisciplinary workshop on the current changes of the Greenland ice sheet, sea-ice and permafrost, and presents an opportunity for in-depth discussions of the observed changes as measured by satellite, airborne and in-situ networks (climate stations and GPS), the modelling of the changes, and future projections of change.

The workshop is part of the "Nuuk Climate Days", with a parallel workshop on the "Arctic Freshwater Budget (FreshNor)", and a joint event on the impact of effects of climate changes on the Greenland society, arranged in cooperation with the Danish Meterological Institute, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, and Asiaq-Greenland Survey.

Deadlines: May 1 - Housing. June 1 - Abstracts. The workshop is timed to allow easy one-stop air connections via Iceland from major US and European airports.

Posted by: Rene Forsberg, DTU-Space, rf@space.dtu.dk


Tuesday, January 27, 2009

US Midwest Glaciological Meeting

With this email, we announce the 2009 MGM (the Midwest Glaciological Meeting) to be held at the University of Chicago on 27-28 March (Friday and Saturday). An impromptu "iceberg calving workshop" is also tentatively scheduled (pending interest) for the afternoon prior to the beginning of MGM, on Thursday the 26th of March.

As with past MGM's, the meeting will be strictly informal, with no time-limits on presentations (all will be oral, projection equipment provided). (Speakers be warned that the lack of a time limit is paired with a lack of prohibition on heckling by audience members...)

Details of the meeting's location, timing and travel arrangements can be found on the following website:


If you are interested in attending the meeting (and the possible calving workshop), please respond to the email link in the web page or to:


... to express your interests/intentions.

With best wishes, and in hopes that we will see you in Chicago this March,

Doug MacAyeal, Jeremy Bassis and Mac Cathles

(MGM organizing committee)

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Past Global Changes (PAGES) 3rd Open Science Meeting

Meeting Announcement and Call for Abstracts
Past Global Changes (PAGES)
3rd Open Science Meeting
Oregon State University
Corvallis, Oregon
8-11 July 2009

Abstract Submission Deadline: Monday, 16 March 2009

For further information, please go to:
http://www.pages-osm.org/

Or contact:
Thorsten Kiefer
Email: kiefer@pages.unibe.ch

--------------------
The Past Global Changes (PAGES) 3rd Open Science Meeting, will be held
8-11 July 2009, at Oregon State University, in Corvallis, Oregon. The
program will cover diverse paleoscience around the themes of past
climate forcings, regional climate dynamics, Earth System dynamics and
human-climate-ecosystem interactions. Abstracts are now being accepted
for poster presentations.

A Young Scientists Meeting will be held alongside the Open Science
Meeting from 6-7 July. The meeting aims to support the development of
young paleoscientists by providing the opportunity to advance their
scientific skills and to network with colleagues, leading senior
scientists and program representatives.

The meetings will be organized around open poster sessions and invited
oral presentations, as well as "hot topic" discussions.

Poster session topics will include:
1. Climate Forcings
2. Chronology
3. Regional Climate Dynamics
4. Proxy Development, Calibration, and Validation
5. Global-Scale Earth System Dynamics
6. Modeling in Paleoscience
7. Past Human-Climate-Ecosystem Interactions
8. Data Management

Oral session topics will include:
1. The Global Hydrological Cycle and Abrupt Changes
2. Reconstructing Climate Modes
3. Chronology in Paleoscience
4. Climate-Biogeochemistry Interactions
5. Land Cover, Water, and Sediment: Regional and Global Synthesis
6. Proxy Development, Calibration, and Validation
7. Regional Climate Reconstructions: Filling the Gaps
8. Past Perspectives on Modern Human-Environment Interactions
9. Modeling
10. Origin of Interglacial Climate Variability
11. Stability of Polar Ice Sheets and Sea Level

"Hot Topic" discussions are likely to include:
1. The role of paleoscience in IPCC
2. Past Ocean Acidification: Biogenic Impacts and Climate Feedbacks
3. Transient vs. Rapid Change in the Sahara
4. How Abruptly Can Sea Level Rise?

The deadline for submission of poster abstracts is Monday, 16 March
2009. To suggest or organize topical clusters of posters within the
groups listed above, please contact:
Thorsten Kiefer
Email: kiefer@pages.unibe.ch

For further information, please go to:
http://www.pages-osm.org/

Friday, January 23, 2009

Workshop Announcement: International Collaboration in Arctic System Modeling

Workshop Announcement
International Collaboration in Arctic System Modeling
University of Quebec
Montreal, Canada
16-17 July 2009

Application Deadline: Sunday, 15 March 2009

For further information, please go to:
http://www.iarc.uaf.edu/workshops/2009/arctic_system_model_09

--------------------
Organizers invite participation at the upcoming workshop, "International
Collaboration in Arctic System Modeling," to be held 16-17 July 2009, at
the University of Quebec, in Montreal, Canada.

This is the third in a series of Arctic System Modeling workshops. It
will take place on the Thursday and Friday immediately preceding the
MOCA Joint Assembly 2009. This workshop will address international
development plans for Arctic System Modeling and coordinate future
simulations, results sharing, and analysis. Further information on the
core focus of the meeting and details on how to apply are provided at
the workshop website:
http://www.iarc.uaf.edu/workshops/2009/arctic_system_model_09.

Partial travel assistance will be available for up to 50 selected
participants. If you plan to attend MOCA 2009, please also consider
submitting an application to be part of this workshop. The abstract
submission deadline for MOCA 2009 is Friday, January 23 2009. The
deadline for applications to attend the "International Collaboration in
Arctic System Modeling" is Sunday, 15 March 2009.

Organizers of this workshop include:
Laxmi Sushama, University of Quebec Montreal,
Ralf Doescher, Swedish Meteorological and Hydrologic Institute,
Andrey Proshutinsky, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
Scott Elliot, Los Alamos National Laboratory,
Dieter Wolf-Gladrow, Alfred Wegener Institute, and
Andrew Roberts, Arctic Region Supercomputing Center/International Arctic
Research Center.

For further information, please go to:
http://www.iarc.uaf.edu/workshops/2009/arctic_system_model_09.







Monday, January 19, 2009

IPY Antarctic Sea Ice Workshop – Lucca, Italy – March 22nd – 24th

IPY Antarctic Sea Ice Workshop – Lucca, Italy – March 22nd – 24th
 
Second Announcement:  20th January 2009
 
Overview
The IPY sea ice workshop will bring together participants of the SIPEX and SIMBA cruises conducted in the Antarctic in spring 2007, as well as others interested in Antarctic sea ice processes, modelling and remote sensing.  Ground-truthing of remote sensing will be a major emphasis as specific RADARSAT and ICESat missions coincided with the cruises, as well as an archival campaign for Envisat ASAR imagery.  There are currently 35 confirmed attendees.  The schedule will allow for parallel breakout sessions to facilitate discussion on topics of interest to workshop participants, and the plenary session on the first day will afford all participants an opportunity to propose discussion topics.  One outcome of the workshop will be a final list of papers for the special volume of Deep Sea Research that will focus on the results of Antarctic sea ice research during IPY. 
 
Schedule
The workshop will commence at 1600 on Sunday 22nd March and finish at 1800 Tuesday 24th March.  You should plan to arrive in Lucca by lunch time Sunday and depart on the morning of Wednesday 25th (3 nights).  Please do not plan to leave on Tuesday (unless it is after 1800) as the final session of the workshop will be important.
 
Sunday 22nd March
1600 – 1830.  Plenary session, open space format.  All participants will have an opportunity to nominate, and sign up for, discussion sessions.
 
Monday 23rd March
Parallel discussion sessions, each 1.5 hours separated by breaks and lunch
 
Tuesday 24th March
Morning session:  Two parallel discussion sessions
Afternoon session:  Plenary session, rapporteur reports, outcomes, DSR discussion.
Evening: Final discussions and workshop dinner
 
Wednesday 25th March
Depart after breakfast
 
Venue and travel information
The workshop will be help in Lucca, Italy at the same venue as the Gordon Conference on Polar Marine Science (which will be held the week before, see http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2009&program=polar ). 
 
The workshop registration fee is €312.00 (double accommodation) or €432.00 (single accommodation), and covers all meals and accommodation for 3 days from lunch on Sunday 22nd to breakfast on Wednesday 25th inclusive. 
 
Pisa is the nearest major airport.  Transport arrangements between Pisa and the workshop venue will be advised at a later date.
 
Registration
To register please contact Tony Worby by email [a.worby@utas.edu.au].  You must then make your own bookings directly with the hotel, by contacting Bruno at sales@ciocco.it and stating that you will be attending the IPY sea ice workshop.  If you intend to share accommodation you can request/nominate a room mate when you book.  Registration and bookings should be made as soon as possible and no later than February 6th.
 
Funding
Limited funding is available to cover the registration costs of people who would otherwise not be able to attend.  If you wish to apply for funding you must contact Steve Ackley [stephen.ackley@utsa.edu] or Tony Worby [a.worby@utas.edu.au] by Friday 30th January.  Funding has been provided by SCAR and the ACE CRC in Hobart and we gratefully acknowledge their support.
 
 







Friday, January 16, 2009

Field Experience for woman :)

As many of you know, Girls on Ice is a program designed to connect high
school girls with field science (particularly alpine geology and
glaciology) and mountaineering. We run the program tuition free to
provide opportunities to girls from all backgrounds. Girls on Ice has
been going on in various forms since 1999. Many of you have helped
support the program by spreading the word to girls who might be
interested in applying. Thank you!

Girls on Ice is currently going through a transition in terms of our
institutional affiliation. The University of Alaska Fairbanks will now
be in the institutional host for the program and we are hoping to expand
and evolve the program in new and exciting ways.

We have a new website:

http://girlsonice.org

which has quite a bit of information and more will be added soon.

We will shortly be announcing the Summer 2009 program. Please pass on
this information  - to girls, to teachers, to faculty in other fields,
to anyone you might know who would be interested and supportive of the
program.

Please let me know if you have any questions.

Thank you and Happy New Year,
Erin

-- 
Erin Pettit
Research Assistant Professor of Glaciology
College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
PO Box 755940
900 Yukon Drive, Rm 358
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Fairbanks, AK 99775
907-474-5389
pettit@gi.alaska.edu
http://gi.alaska.edu/~pettit
http://girlsonice.org









Wednesday, January 14, 2009

MOCA-09 Session Submission: Observations of High Latitude Climate Change

IAMAS, IAPSO and IACS invite the international atmospheric, oceanographic and cryospheric research community to MOCA-09, their Joint Assembly, to be held in July 2009 in Montréal, Québec, Canada.

THE DEADLINE FOR THE SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS IS JANUARY 23, 2009

SEE:
http://www.moca-09.org

Consider submitting a contribution to the (Joint) Symposium XYZ:

J02 Observations of High Latitude Climate Change

http://www.moca-09.org/e/J01.shtml


Final Call for Abstracts
"Observations of High Latitude Climate Change"
MOCA-09 Joint Assembly, July 2009
Montreal, Quebec, Canada

IAMAS, IAPSO and IACS invite the international atmospheric, oceanographic and cryospheric research community to MOCA-09, their Joint Assembly, to be held in July 2009 in Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Session conveners for (J01) "Observations of High Latitude Climate Change" seek abstract submissions for relevant papers that bring together observational descriptions of the high latitude regions in the atmosphere, ocean and cryosphere from 200 years ago to the present. Topics from both polar regions as well as from in situ and space based observing platforms are the basis for this symposium. New observations collected via recent efforts, including the International Polar Year (IPY), International Trans-Antarctic Scientific Expedition (ITASE), and other ongoing long-term observational and paleo-climate efforts related to climate change at the poles, are solicited. In addition, presentations dealing with observational and data assimilation methods are welcome. Sample topic areas include ice core observations, mass balance investigations (surface, airborne or satellite based), satellite observations (e.g. altimetry, clouds, icebergs, etc.), ocean monitoring studies (e.g. ARGO, AON, etc.), polar surface observing networks (e.g. Automatic Weather Stations, ground-based GPS, etc.), and data syntheses from reanalysis.

Abstracts are due 23 January 2009.  Please submit abstracts here: http://www.iamas-iapso-iacs-2009-montreal.ca/e/02-abstracts_submission_e.shtml

Questions regarding this session should be directed to mattl@ssec.wisc.edu.

Convenors:
Matthew Lazzara (IAMAS), Shelley Knuth (IAMAS), David Reusch (IAMAS), Michael Town (IAMAS), Peter Haugan (IAPSO)


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Matthew Lazzara -Meteorologist- Antarctic Meteorological Research Center
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AMRC at McMurdo Weather Office Phone: x2565/pager 328 Dorm 209/323/x2809
AWS at Crary Science and Engineering Center  Lab 238   Phone: x4238
McMurdo Station, Project S-202/283, PSC 469 Box 800,   APO AP 96599-1035
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901 Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences    http://amrc.ssec.wisc.edu
Space Science and Engineering Center         E-mail: mattl@ssec.wisc.edu
University of Wisconsin-Madison                    Phone: (608) 262-0436
1225 West Dayton Street, Madison, WI 53706           Fax: (608) 263-6738
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