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Joseph Manning Lecture: Volcanoes, The Nile, and the End of Ancient Egypt

100 Donald P. Corbett Bldg., University of Maine, Orono

Tuesday, October 30, 2018 at 7:00 pm in 100 Donald P. Corbett Bldg, University of Maine, Orono   Manning will present recent research that integrates Paleoclimatology and Hellenistic history with a particular focus on Ptolemaic Egypt. His lecture will center on recent work that connects explosive volcanic eruptions and the impact of these volcanic eruptions […]

Arthur Anderson Lecture – Rescheduled

232 South Stevens

New Excavations at the Village of Chouacoet, Saco Bay, Maine Arthur Anderson, University of New England December 7, 2018 at 2:00 pm 232 South Stevens

A Research Agenda: Current Research Projects and Plans for Collaboration – Linda Markowsky

138 Sawyer Environmental Research Building 138 Sawyer Env. Res. Building, University of Maine

Thursday, February 7, 2019, 2PM 138 Sawyer Conference Room   Abstract: Automated and semi-automated systems that derive actionable information from massive, heterogeneous datasets are essential for many applications, and the reasoning of such systems must be as clear as possible in order to earn our trust. Lattice data analytics, a current research project, is intended […]

Discussion on Maine’s Climate and Data Tools – Sean Birkel

Mitchell Center, Rm 107, University of Maine

107 Norman Smith Hall SBE Seminar Series Dr. Sean Birkel is a Research Assistant Professor at the Climate Change Institute. He is also the Maine State Climatologist. Sean's research interests […]

Patterns of Change in Arctic Lakes of Western Greenland – Robert Northington

Mitchell Center, Rm 107, University of Maine

107 Norman Smith Hall SBE Seminar Series Dr. Northington is an ecologist interested in how climate change influences aquatic ecosystem processes. His research focuses on changes in aquatic productivity and biogeochemistry, along with altered aquatic-terrestrial linkages in Arctic and temperate aquatic systems. Currently, Dr. Northington is an Assistant Professor of Biology and Environmental Science at […]

Racing the Clock to Preserve the Past… A community-based approach to managing Maine’s shell middens – A. Kelley & B. Newsom

Mitchell Center, Rm 107, University of Maine

Alice R. Kelley, Climate Change Institute & School of Earth and Climate Sciences, UMaine Bonnie Newsom, Dept. of Anthropology, UMaine The Maine Midden Minders is a volunteer, citizen science organization being developed to help document and moni-tor Maine’s eroding shell middens. These features are composed of mollusk shells, artifacts, and faunal remains, and archive up […]

“Hidden Energy: Agriculture’s Long-Term Sustainability” – Professor Geoff Cunfer, University of Saskatchewan

Hill Auditorium, Barrows Hall

“Hidden Energy: Agriculture's Long-Term Sustainability" Professor Geoff Cunfer, University of Saskatchewan Monday, Oct. 21 3:00 – 4:30 pm Hill Auditorium, Barrows Hall For most of human history, farmers were society’s crucial energy suppliers. Agriculture set the limits of economic productivity. This pubic lecture explains how methods from sustainability science can reveal how farmers historically managed […]

Holocene climate change in southern Greenland from chironomid assemblages and oxygen isotopes in lake sediments – Melissa Chipman

Bryand Global Sciences Center - Room 307

Holocene climate change in southern Greenland from chironomid assemblages and oxygen isotopes in lake sediments Dr. Melissa Chipman, Syracuse University Thursday, October 24, 1 pm ~ Bryand 307 The Arctic is the most rapidly warming place on earth, and paleorecords offer insight into how this vast region responded to a complex suite of past changes. […]

A tale of ice and fire – using lake sediments to understand fire regimes and permafrost thaw in the Arctic – Melissa Chipman

102 Murray Hall

A tale of ice and fire – using lake sediments to understand fire regimes and permafrost thaw in the Arctic Dr. Melissa Chipman  - Syracuse University Friday, October 24, 3:10 pm ~ Murray 102 Amplified warming has facilitated dramatic examples of disturbance in the Arctic. Both tundra and boreal areas have experienced unprecedented wildfire activity […]

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