News & Media

BDN interviews Birkel about Bangor’s alarming warming this December

Sean Birkel, Maine state climatologist and assistant professor with a joint appointment in University of Maine Cooperative Extension and the UMaine Climate Change Institute, spoke to the Bangor Daily News about the exceptionally warm December in Bangor. “If we look at the larger statewide scales, winters in Maine are warming on average, though there is […]

Read more

Global glacier change in the 21st century: Every increase in temperature matters – Rounce et al., Science, 379, 78-83, 2023 (W. Kochtitzky*)

Global glacier change in the 21st century: Every increase in temperature matters David R. Rounce1,2*, Regine Hock2,3, Fabien Maussion4, Romain Hugonnet5,6,7, William Kochtitzky8,9, Matthias Huss5,6,10, Etienne Berthier7, Douglas Brinkerhoff11, Loris Compagno5,6, Luke Copland8, Daniel Farinotti5,6, Brian Menounos12,13, Robert W. McNabb14   * William Kochtitzky received an MS in Quaternary and Climate Studies through the Climate […]

Read more

Gill speaks to Physics World about the term ‘Anthropocene’

Jacquelyn Gill, associate professor of paleoecology and plant ecology at the University of Maine, spoke to Physics World about the term “Anthropocene,” which geologists have not yet fully defined despite the fact that the term has entered the public discourse. “I think, in a lot of ways, the cat’s out of the bag. … What […]

Read more

News Center Maine features Birkel research about manufactured homes

News Center Maine featured Sean Birkel, research assistant professor of the Climate Change Institute, and his research with the University of Vermont and University of New Hampshire about the climate resilience of manufactured homes. “The whole basin, and also [the] Gulf of Maine, last year and this year, are the two warmest years on record. […]

Read more

UMaine-led study shows mountain glacier melting is linked to shifting westerlies and likely to accelerate – A. Audet, A. Putnam, G. Denton et al.

The combination of global atmospheric warming and westerly winds shifting toward the poles will likely speed up the recession of mountain glaciers in both hemispheres, according to a UMaine study. Mountain glaciers freeze and gain mass when the climate cools, and melt and lose mass when the climate warms. The extent to which the fluctuations […]

Read more

Alessandro Mereghetti awarded an NSF Arctic DDRIG grant award

EES/SBE/CCI PhD student Alessandro Mereghetti has been awarded an NSF Arctic DDRIG: Assessing the impacts of Pleistocene megaherbivores n vegetation stability and resilience in the Arctic ($56,118). This will support his upcoming fieldwork in Alaska, using ancient DNA to reconstruct the last 120,000 years around Squirrel Lake in the Kotzebue Sound region.

Read more

AP cites information from UMaine Climate Reanalyzer – S. Birkel

In an article about the warming Arctic regions of Alaska, the Associated Press cited information from the University of Maine Climate Reanalyzer that showed last Sunday, the Arctic as a whole averaged 11.5 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than the 1979-2000 average temperature. The following Monday, Climate Reanalyzer’s computer models showed that average to likely be 10.5 […]

Read more