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Displaying items by tag: Participants
Thursday, 27 September 2007 19:43
UNEP/GRID-Arendal: Educational posters for the International Polar Year - Call for partnerships
Educational posters for the International Polar Year: First announcement, and call for partnerships UNEP/GRID-Arendal For further information, please go to: http://polar.grida.no/ipyposters UNEP Key Polar Centre at UNEP/GRID-Arendal has received support from the Research Council of Norway (Forskningsradet) to prepare a set of posters for the International Polar Year (IPY). This project supports the education, outreach, and communication efforts of IPY. The posters will primarily present polar science and issues and secondarily create awareness of IPY and its research activities. The main objective is to try to answer the question: Why, and how, are the ...
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News And Announcements
Monday, 24 September 2007 21:16
New Generation of Polar Researchers (NGPR) Symposium: Application Deadline
New Generation of Polar Researchers (NGPR) Symposium, Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA, 4-11 May 2008 Application Deadline: Monday, 15 October 2007 For further information, please go to: http://www.disccrs.org/ngpr/ Advanced students and PhD graduates conducting research in the Arctic or Antarctic during the International Polar Year are invited to apply for the New Generation of Polar Researchers (NGPR) Symposium being held on 4-11 May 2008 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Applications must be submitted by Monday, 15 October 2007. Complete application information is available at: ...
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News And Announcements
Monday, 24 September 2007 19:42
Thoughts on Sea Ice Day
tagzaniapasteipy2007seaice tagged map - Tagzania
September 21st, 2007, marked the first International Polar day... this time with the focus on Sea Ice. It was a great opportunity to involve both the scientific community, and the public around the world.
Within a week of asking, a request to the IPY community resulted in translations of the flyer into eighteen languages:
...
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IPY Blogs
Monday, 24 September 2007 18:09
Sea Ice Balloons in Malaysia
YAYASAN ANAK WARISAN ALAM(406702 M) (Children's Environmental Heritage Foundation) "Committed to changing young lives" SEPTEMBER 21, 2007 YAWA & IPY DAY 60 children, age between 4 -17 years old and 20 adults are attending the annual event of YAWA Ramadhan Camp, at Agro Tech Resort, Ulu Langat. The theme of this years event is; "Be a GREEN MUSLIM". Since this camp falls on IPY Day, the camp coordinators are taking the opportunity to introduce IPY to these children from a diversified background, to understand IPY and the theme, SEA ICE. A demonstration on the experiment of ice cubes will be one of the activities at this camp. Pictures will be sent to ...
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News And Announcements
Friday, 21 September 2007 15:40
Supporting Documents for YSC/APECS Meeting
The IPY International Programme Office (IPO) has recently received some sponsorship to seed a meeting of the IPY International Youth Steering Committee (IYSC), including the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS). This meeting will occur in Stockholm at the end of September. Below is background material for this meeting.
Meeting Details (252 KB DOC) includes participants, overview, agenda, and logistics
Planning Information and Summary (128 KB PDF)
APEC...
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links and resources
Friday, 21 September 2007 01:05
Experiences in Shaktoolik, Alaska
Shaktoolik, Alaska: Proposed Study on Local Knowledge of Sea Ice and Weather Conditions and Approaches to Adaptation to Climate/Environmental Change
Part of IPY project 166: Sea Ice Knowledge and Use (SIKU)
Report on the pilot visit, September 2-13, 2007
By Dr. Anja Nicole Stuckenberger, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA
The study of Inuit/Iñupiaq cultural knowledge and adaptation to climate/environmental change that I envision as my contribution to the SIKU project will take place in two Arctic communities: the Iñupiat village of Shaktoolik in Norton Sound, Alaska (population 180) and the Inuit villag...
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IPY Blogs
Friday, 21 September 2007 00:39
Working with Iñupiaq hunters in Shishmaref, Alaska.
Sea Ice Knowledge Studies in Shishmaref, Alaska
Part of IPY project 166: Sea Ice Knowledge and Use (SIKU)
by Josh Wisniewski, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, PhD Candidate Department of Anthropology
What do Iñupiaq hunters in the Northwest Alaska community of Shishmaref know about sea ice? How do they express knowledge in the context of hunting? And how can we come to know as directly as possible something of what people know about the environment and how they know it in relation to converging and diverging ontological and epistemological structures that shape local knowledge claims? To explore these questions I am c...
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IPY Blogs
Wednesday, 19 September 2007 20:41
The Birth of Sea Ice
SIPEX: The first two weeks
After 6 days and nights of rocking, rolling and bouncing our way through the Southern Ocean from Hobart, there was an abrupt change just before dawn and we were treated to a gentle rocking motion. Strong south-westerly winds during the previous day and night had pushed the sea ice to the north and caused more to form, so we reached the beginning of the ice a bit sooner than anticipated.
First light revealed that we were going through bands of pancake ice - ice that forms as irregular roundish patties - separated by open water, some of which had an oily sheen to it. The sheen was caused by grease ice that forms when tiny ice crystals, known as frazil, are mixed through the top few meters of water. This is the first stage of sea ice de...
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Tuesday, 18 September 2007 14:19
El Cultural: Interview with Michel Beland (In Spanish)
WIN A WEEK ABOARD AN ARCTIC ICEBREAKER!!
(INCLUDING TRANSPORTATION FROM YOUR HOME COUNTRY)
In April 2008, join journalists from all over the world for a week aboard the Canadian research icebreaker Amundsen.
The World Federation of Science Journalists—in collaboration with the Canada Foundation for Innovation and the International Polar Year Circumpolar Flaw Lead Project—announces a competition offering science journalists the chance to win one of three week-long trips aboard the Canadian research icebreaker Amundsen. You will fly all the way to Inuvik (Canada), and hop aboard a Twin Otter aircraft to the famous icebreaker, where you will get first hand experience of global warming where it is unfolding the fastest.
ENTRY GUIDELINES...
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Monday, 17 September 2007 22:51
Palmer's Penguins and the Warming of Antarctica
SciencePoles interviewed Meredith Hooper to mark the publication of her new book: 'The Ferocious Summer: Palmer's Penguins and the Warming of Antarctica'. A trustee of the IPF-UK and recipient of the US National Science Foundation Antarctica Service Medal, Meredith Hooper's writing ranges from award-wining non-fiction books for all ages to academic articles and highly acclaimed fiction and information titles for children. During the last fourteen years, she has been invited as a writer on United States and Australian Antarctic programmes and has specialised in writing about the history, geology and wildlife of Antarctica.I...
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