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10 events found.

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  • February 2019

  • Fri 15

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

    February 15, 2019 @ 3:10 pm - 4:10 pm
    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 […]

  • Mon 25

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

    February 25, 2019 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
    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 […]

  • October 2019

  • Mon 21

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

    October 21, 2019 @ 3:00 pm - 4:30 pm
    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 […]

  • Thu 24

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

    October 24, 2019 @ 1:00 pm
    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. […]

  • Thu 24

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

    October 24, 2019 @ 3:10 pm
    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 […]

  • November 2019

  • Wed 13

    MODELING MOUNTAIN GLACIERS TO INFER PAST CLIMATE CHANGES – ALICE DOUGHTY

    November 13, 2019 @ 1:00 pm
    Bryand Global Sciences Center - Room 307

    CLIMATE CHANGE INSTITUTE LECTURE SERIES MODELING MOUNTAIN GLACIERS TO INFER PAST CLIMATE CHANGES Alice Doughty Visiting Assistant Professor in Geology Bates College   Wednesday, November 13, 2019, 1 PM 307 Bryand Global Science Center Abstract:  Glaciers advance in response to cooling temperatures and retreat in response to warming temperatures.  In addition to this general relationship, […]

  • Thu 14

    RESPONDING TO THE MENTAL HEALTH IMPACTS OF DISASTERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE – Jennifer First

    November 14, 2019 @ 11:00 am
    138 Sawyer Environmental Research Building 138 Sawyer Env. Res. Building, University of Maine

    Jennifer Frist, MSW, PhD Assistant Professor, School of Social Work University of Southern Maine   Thursday, November 14, 2019, 11am 138 Sawyer Conference Room Abstract:  Climate change and disaster events are growing reality in communities across the globe. Climate-change induced disaster events can cause significant psychological harm and result in a range of mental health […]

  • Fri 15

    DISASTER, CLIMATE, AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT – AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH – M. HARAGUCHI

    November 15, 2019 @ 3:00 pm
    309 Boardman Hall

    Disaster, Climate, and Sustainable Development - An Interdisciplinary Approach Masa Haraguchi, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University   Friday, November 15, 2019 - 3:00 PM 309 Boardman Hall

  • January 2020

  • Thu 30

    Spatial fingerprint of deglacial temperature change in eastern North America: More than one way to kill a spruce forest – Dr. Jack Williams

    January 30, 2020 @ 4:00 pm
    200 Nutting Hall

    Dr. Jack Williams, UW Madison Thursday, January 30, 2020 4 pm, Nutting 100   The last deglaciation in eastern North America offers a classic system for studying climate-driven forest range dynamics during large and abrupt climate changes, but paleoclimate and paleofire records are surprisingly scarce. In this talk, I will first present new reconstructions of […]

  • Fri 31

    Ecological Responses to Climate Change; Lessons from the Past – Jack Williams

    January 31, 2020 @ 7:00 pm
    Sea Dog, 26 Front Street, Bangor, Maine
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Tel: 207.581.2190 Fax: 207.581.1203 contactcci@maine.edu
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