Friday, December 23, 2011

BAS Job Postings

Hi UKPN,

I hope you're all enjoying a great holiday, so sorry for the deluge of emails - but over a dozen great jobs/PhDs/field assistant positions based from the British Antarctic Survey (based both in Cambridge and in many parts of the Antarctic) were just posted on the APECS jobs site. I thought I'd give you a heads up so you can check them out when you have a free moment.


Make sure to tell them you found out about it through APECS & UKPN!

Jobs in cryospheric research at Edinburgh University

Some great-looking fellowships available in Edinburgh...

Happy Holidays,
Allen
-----------------------------

Re potential lectureships/fellowships in cryospheric research at Edinburgh University


The School of GeoSciences at the University of Edinburgh is looking to recruit up to five new tenure-track posts (Chancellor's Fellowships). These positions are aimed at early-career individuals who have begun to establish a reputation for the highest quality research and who have a commitment to teaching at university level. One of the areas that the School is prioritising for recruitment is in 'Remote Sensing of the Cryosphere'. However, as you will see from the links below, outstanding applicants in any area of the School's research activity are encouraged to apply and I therefore encourage cryospheric scientists to consider this open opportunity to strengthen the 'icy' research undertaken here at Edinburgh University.

Please follow the links below for further details and don't hesitate to contact me if you have any queries.

Cheers and festive greetings,

Pete Nienow

pnienow@geo.ed.ac.uk
00-44-(0)131-650-9139

First deadline for applications, 16th January 2012.

http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-departments/geosciences/research/chancellors-fellowships  

http://www.jobs.ed.ac.uk/vacancies/index.cfm?fuseaction=vacancies.detail&vacancy_ref=3015150

The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Fwd: Conquering the Antarctic - UK concert tour

Dear All,

An opportunity to see polar science and the arts coming together beautifully!

Merry Christmas,


Sian
--
President, UK Polar Network


----- Forwarded message from amarshall@cls.co.uk -----
Date: Mon, 19 Dec 2011 11:47:12 +0000
From: Alexandra Marshall <amarshall@cls.co.uk>
Reply-To: Alexandra Marshall <amarshall@cls.co.uk>
Subject: Conquering the Antarctic - UK concert tour
To: Alexandra Marshall <amarshall@cls.co.uk>

I wanted to draw your attention to our UK concert tour Conquering the
Antarctic, which aims to celebrate the centenary of Captain Scott's
arrival at the South Pole through music, words and photographs.

Leading UK chamber orchestra, City of London Sinfonia, in partnership
with the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, are
embarking on a landmark concert tour in February 2012 to celebrate the
centenary of the expedition of Captain Scott to the South Pole.

Celebrating the epic adventure of the explorers, including
Cheltenham-born Edward Wilson, the orchestra will perform extracts
from Vaughan Williams' iconic film score Scott of the Antarctic,
interspersed with moving readings from Scott's diary and letters. The
concert includes the world premiere of Cecilia McDowall's new piece,
Seventy Degrees Below Zero, setting music to words inspired by Scott's
poignant final letters, as well as projections of stunning expedition
photographs by Herbert Ponting, restored to their original glory.

I am attaching a press release which details all the concert dates and
venues for the tour.

If you would like some flyers to display/distribute for the tour or
require any further information, please do not hesitate to contact me.

I look forward to hearing from you.

All best
Alexandra

Alexandra Marshall
Marketing & PR Manager

4th Floor, Piano House, 9 Brighton Terrace, London, SW9 8DJ
020 7621 2804
www.cls.co.uk<http://www.cls.co.uk/>

Conquering the
Antarctic<http://www.cityoflondonsinfonia.co.uk/Conquering-the-Antarctic-/>
3-8 February 2012
Birmingham, Cambridge, Cardiff &
Cheltenham<http://www.cityoflondonsinfonia.co.uk/Conquering-the-Antarctic-/>

Find us: Twitter<http://twitter.com/CityLdnSinfonia>
Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/cityoflondonsinfonia>
Blog<http://cls.posterous.com/>

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
City of London Sinfonia Ltd, registered in England no. 1692341
Registered charity no. 286818
P Please consider the environment before printing this email

----- End forwarded message -----


--
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Competition funded PhD project: biophysical approach to explore and understand muscle proteins from extreme environments

Potential joint PhD project between BAS and Leeds for  someone with a first or upper second degree in biology or physics.

 

See details at

http://www.findaphd.com/search/ProjectDetails.aspx?PJID=31457&LID=760

 

Amélie

 


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of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
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Thursday, December 8, 2011

Funding opportunity

Antarctic Science International Bursary

 

The Antarctic Science International Bursary announces that applications are now being accepted for 2012. The deadline for submission is 11:59 p.m. GMT on 31 March 2012.

 

Antarctic Science International Bursary awards are made annually in amounts of up to 5,000 British pounds, to support the development of the careers of promising young scientists working in any field of Antarctic science. The purpose of the award is to broaden the scope of an existing research project, especially for postdoctoral studies, through:

 

      - Funding extra field or laboratory work;

      - Purchasing/contributing towards the cost of a key piece of

      equipment; or

      - Funding international collaboration.

 

Submission deadline: 31 March 2012 at 11:59 p.m. GMT.

 

Further information and detailed application instructions are available

at: http://www.antarcticsciencebursary.org.uk/apps.php.

 

 

 

 


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This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Re: Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing vacancy at the British Antarctic Survey

Sorry for the additional email, but Adrian has asked me to correct the below - the deadline for application is DECEMBER 31 (not October, which has passed).

Best,
Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/


2011/11/25 Allen Pope <apope00@gmail.com>
From BAS, looks like a great job opportunity!

Best,
Allen
_______________________________________________

Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing vacancy at the British Antarctic Survey

The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) is recruiting for a Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing specialist. The role will contribute to providing geographic information support to BAS science and operations, as well as topographic mapping in Antarctica.
Applicants will need a sound grounding in photogrammetry and image analysis techniques, enjoy working in a busy team setting and be able to liaise with BAS scientists and operations staff to identify and deliver remote sensing solutions.

This is a two-year fixed term appointment in Cambridge, UK.
For more details see: www.antarctica.ac.uk/employment/vacancies/job.php?JobID=677
The closing date is 31 December 2011.

Dr Adrian Fox (ajfo@bas.ac.uk)

Head, Mapping and Geographic Information Centre,
British Antarctic survey.

Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing vacancy at the British Antarctic Survey

From BAS, looks like a great job opportunity!

Best,
Allen
_______________________________________________

Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing vacancy at the British Antarctic Survey

The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) is recruiting for a Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing specialist. The role will contribute to providing geographic information support to BAS science and operations, as well as topographic mapping in Antarctica.
Applicants will need a sound grounding in photogrammetry and image analysis techniques, enjoy working in a busy team setting and be able to liaise with BAS scientists and operations staff to identify and deliver remote sensing solutions.

This is a two-year fixed term appointment in Cambridge, UK.
For more details see: www.antarctica.ac.uk/employment/vacancies/job.php?JobID=677
The closing date is 31 October 2011.

Dr Adrian Fox (ajfo@bas.ac.uk)
Head, Mapping and Geographic Information Centre,
British Antarctic survey.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Your Poster in the House of Commons?

Not strictly polar, but interesting anyway :-)

Amélie

SET for BRITAIN 2012

On Monday 12 March 2012 the Parliamentary and Scientific Committee will be joining with a number of important scientific and engineering institutions, including the Royal Academy of Engineering, the Society of Biology, the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Institute of Physics and The Physiological Society, to stage SET for BRITAIN, the annual poster competition and exhibition in the House of Commons Terrace Marquee.

The day will be divided into three sessions. Applications are invited from early-stage and early-career research scientists, engineers and technologists who wish to exhibit posters in one of the following three areas:

·  Biological and Biomedical Science

·  Physical Sciences (Chemistry and Physics)

·  Engineering

Full details of the competition and the application process can be found at www.setforbritain.org.uk. The closing date for entries is 24th December 2011.

 

 


--
This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Postgraduate and early years conference on the Nordic region

For the Arctic Social Scientists on this list, potentially of interest. Tell them the UKPN sent you!

-Allen
-----------------------------

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Postgraduate and early years conference on the Nordic region
Date: Fri, 04 Nov 2011 16:06:19 +0000
From: DM Hinde <dominic.hinde@ed.ac.uk>
Reply-To: d.m.hinde@sms.ed.ac.uk
The division of Scandinavian Studies at the University of Edinburgh,   in association with the Nordix research network, is organising a   conference for doctoral and early career researchers.  Due to take place in February, the conference is open to any doctoral   or postdoctoral student with a humanities research topic related to   the Nordic countries. This encompasses the area from Greenland in the   west to Finland and the Baltic states in the east, as well as the   northern peripheries of the British Isles.  More information is enclosed in the attached pdf, and I would be very   grateful of you could forward this to your doctoral and postdoctoral   students.  Regards  Dominic Hinde Phd candidate and conference co-organiser  --  Dominic Hinde Doctoral student in Scandinavian Studies/Doktorand i Nordiska Studier University of Edinburgh/ University of Uppsala  --  The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336.   

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

InBev-Baillet Latour Antarctica Fellowship

Hello UKPN,

See info below for an exciting funding opportunity to work in Antarctica.

Amélie

The InBev-Baillet Latour Fund and the International Polar Foundation (IPF) announce the opening of the 2011 Call for Proposals for the InBev-Baillet Latour Antarctica Fellowship.

The Fellowship of €150 000 has been created to promote research activities at, or in the vicinity of, the Princess Elisabeth Antarctica research station.

Princess Elisabeth Station is located in the Sør Rondane Mountain Range, Dronning Maud Land (East-Antarctica). The station lies at 71° 57' S and 23° 20' E, 220 km due South from the edge of the ice shelf. Research activities extend also to this coastal area.

The Fellowship is to be disbursed over a two year period to cover two field campaigns in Antarctica (to be carried out in the Antarctic summer seasons of Nov. 2012 – Feb. 2013 and Nov. 2013 – Feb. 2014).

The Fellowship is open to doctoral and post-doctoral researchers under the age of 35 years, from all over the World.

The InBev-Baillet Latour Antarctica Fellowship is awarded on a yearly basis. The Annual Call for Proposals will list the scientific research areas, themes, or special topics from which proposals are solicited.

For application details and further information see: http://www.polarfoundation.org/projects/project_detail/inbev-baillet_latour_antarctica_fellowship/

 

*****************************

Dr. Amélie Kirchgaessner FRMetS

British Antarctic Survey

High Cross, Madingley Road

Cambridge

CB3 0ET

United Kingdom

Tel: +44 1223 221359

email : Amelie.Kirchgaessner@bas.ac.uk

*****************************

 


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This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.

Spatial Analysis Workshop, Royal Geographical Society

Dear All,

Please see below from the RGS, apologies for cross-posting.


Spatial Analysis Workshop

Sunday 20 November 2011, at the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)

The RGS-IBG Mapping Unit will be running an afternoon GIS and field
mapping 'Spatial Analysis Workshop'. The workshop is aimed at
expedition researchers who have gathered their field data and are
looking for guidance in kick-starting GIS analysis of their data.

The afternoon will be a practical session, to which you are asked to
bring your own expedition spatial data. The Mapping Unit can then help
to guide you in how your research could be manipulated, displayed and
analysed.

Contact Geography Outdoors in advance with details of your project.
The team can then prepare resources tailored to your needs.

The afternoon will form part of Explore; the expedition and fieldwork
planning weekend <http://www.rgs.org/explore>.

Costs: £55 (incl. VAT) or free to pre-registered Explore delegates

Sian Henley
--
President, UK Polar Network

--
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.

POLAR CITY RED,,,,a novel about future polar city life.....see news here

http://www.hollywoodstarshoney.com/book/global-warming-no-laughing-matter.html

Sci-fi writer Jim Laughter: "Polar cities no laughing matter"
>
> PRESS RELEASE
> contact: Dan Bloom
> danbloom@gmail.com
>
>
> Oklahoma science fiction writer Jim Laughter -- his real name -- has seen
> the future, and he's not laughing. He envisions so-called ''polar cities''
> for future survivors of devastating climate change disasters that will
> impact all four corners of the globe. Welcome to
> "Polar City Red," Laughter's 250-page sci-fi novel that is set for
> a 2012 debut.
>
>
> Forget the mission to Mars, and start thinking about the mission to the
> North Pole.
>
> "Global warming is no laughing matter," says Laughter, a grandfather of
> four in his late 50s and a 20-year veteran of the U.S. Air Force who was
> stationed in Japan and the Philippines, among other places.
>
> "You know, I met a man just the other day who told me, who insisted,
> that global warming is just
> a myth," Laughter, author of ten sci-fi novels and a resident of Mounds,
> Oklahoma, told this reporter. "He saw a program on television that said
> it's a scare tactic
> to direct people's attention away from truly serious issues such as
> the economy and the state of international affairs. He's right about
> one thing; it's a scary subject. And if projections are correct about
> the amount of carbon dioxide polluting our atmosphere, we'd better be
> scared. We may not be at the point of panic yet, but the day is coming
> when this is world is going to turn its back on us and invite us to
> leave forever."
>
> "So I'm putting my heart into this new book," Laughter added. "It's for my
> four grandkids. I hope it helps to wake the world up, too!"
>
>
> "Polar City Red" is a not book written
> by a scientist, ''since I am no scientist," Laughter is quick to add. "But
> I am approaching
> the story as a family man concerned about the future of our planet. If my
> sci-fi story can reach a small audience at first and later reach an
> even greater

--
DANNY GRADUATION SPEECH TO CLASS OF 2011...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-wnrm2jE-E

Polar Cities

I must prefix this post with a bit of back story…

A reader in Taiwan, Danny Bee, left a comment on an article I wrote
("Emily Yoffe Learns The Secret"). I had first assumed that the
comment was spam, though the suspect spam did not follow my
preconceived notions of spam. It had no sales pitch, no links, and no
inappropriate words. However, it didn't exactly fit the article on
which it was submitted:


Yoffe captures my concerns about the modern inception of philosophical
teachings. Not by coming out and saying it, but by a simple inference
from her experiences. I'll remind my readers that I'm not bashing
these teachings, only the glossy cover and Cliff's Notes by which so
many establish their adoption.

…and Mr. Bee's response:


Polar cities in the far distant future to house remnants of humankind
who survive the apocalypse of devastating global warming? The casual
reader might think I am an alarmist or a mere scare-monger, but I am
neither. I am a visionary.


So like a good blogger, I engaged Danny in some email communications
(to verify he was a real person) and tossed out the idea that I write
something up on my opinion of his comment. I did check into Polar
Cities a bit. Wikipedia has a very brief explanation of them.


Polar cities are proposed sustainable polar retreats designed to house
human beings in the future, in the event that global warming causes
the central and middle regions of the Earth to become uninhabitable
for a long period of time. Although they have not been built yet, some
futurists have been giving considerable thought to the concepts
involved.

High-population-density cities, to be built near the Arctic Rim with
sustainable energy and transportation infrastructure, will require
substantial nearby agriculture. Boreal soils are largely poor in key
nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, but nitrogen-fixing plants
(such as thevarious alders) with the proper symbiotic microbes and
mycorrhizal fungi can likely remedy such poverty without the need for
petroleum-derived fertilizers. Regional probiotic soil improvement
should perhaps rank high on any polar cities priority list. James
Lovelock's notion of a widely distributed almanac of science knowledge
and post-industrial survival skills also appears to have value.

As Danny says it, he's not an alarmist nor a scare-monger, just a
visionary. He didn't rule out cuckoo, though to be fair, zealous may
be more apt.

The idea of Polar Cities is in response to doomsday concepts from
global warming. Should the ecosystem collapse as a result of a massive
build-up of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere, then this idea has only rhetorical value. As for the
development and planning of Polar Cities for this foreseen
eventuality, I think it either a bad plan or at least very
pessimistic.

The estimated surface area of our polar land masses seems pretty high
– almost 30 million km². Our population is over 6.7 billion at the
moment. If you do the math on just those numbers, you get population
density of around 224 persons/km². But I think that argument is far
too simple. If we assume that 3/4 of the earth's population dies due
to the volatility of the environment, you're left with 1.675 billion
people looking for ocean-front property. I was also being nice by
saying that we had nearly 30 million square kilometers of land mass
between our two polar regions. If you look at what happens after the
ice sheets melt, land rises from a release in pressure, and volcanoes
blow, you're looking at a lot less inhabitable land after all. I'll
cut it in half to 15 million km² because I'm skeptical about our
building too close to volcanoes, fault lines, and other natural
disasters. I also have to account for the plethora of lake and rivers
that would undoubtedly remain on Antarctica – not to mention its steep
mountain sides and craggy peaks. Now you're looking at a population
density of around 112 persons per square kilometer. That's actually
not that bad. There are far worse places in the world as far as
population density goes.

Now that we have a workable number of people, we can start analyzing
what this new homestead would be like.

I imagine a world metropolis at each pole (technically, the Arctic
surrounds the pole). All nations and all diversity of people have
centralized in two locations of the planet. The central lands of Earth
have become desolate and hostile. You can venture out onto them, but
survivability is contingent upon resources and exposure. The
populations live in high-rise hotels methodically placed in a grid
over the available land masses. The fringe area of decent land would
be more barren of people than the central, cooler parts.
Unfortunately, most people would need to be in Antarctica because of
its concentration of land at the pole. Each hotel would be surrounded
by land necessary to grow food and raise livestock. Everyone in the
square kilometer living unit would be required to do their share of
work to earn their food and living quarters. I'm not entirely sure how
waste would be dealt with – perhaps pumping it into magma faults would
suffice, but it may also be problematic in maintaining such a system.
A refinery would probably take up too much valuable land area.

There would certainly be a militant government in place at both polar
regions. I doubt anything more than a form of Feudalism would be
adopted. With so many different people from different backgrounds,
humans would probably resort to brute strength. With anarchy-like
crime abound and tough living conditions, citizens would surely
profess an allegiance to a "king" for support.

A glimpse into what living in Polar Cities might be like seems more
like a good idea for a Science Fiction novel than any reality we
should plan for. I can almost see an adaptation of "Firefly" applying
to Earth's new living conditions. While interesting to contemplate, I
think time is better spent learning what exactly is happening to the
environment, and reducing our adverse impact to it. Then again, if the
environmental changes are a natural evolution in planetary cycle, then
we humans are going to go through some hard times. I don't think
Darwin's theory of natural selection comes without its pain. A species
must suffer untold losses to survive with its fittest.

Fwd: List of EU Polar Scientists

Dear All,

All those with research interests in the Southern Ocean, please see
below a message I received about the ICED programme. If you would like
to be involved, please reply directly to Emma Cross, details below.

Best wishes,

Sian Henley
--
President, UK Polar Network


----- Forwarded message from iced@bas.ac.uk -----
Date: Thu, 27 Oct 2011 10:06:01 +0100
From: iced iced <iced@bas.ac.uk>
Reply-To: iced iced <iced@bas.ac.uk>
Subject: List of EU Polar Scientists
To: SF Henley <S.F.Henley@sms.ed.ac.uk>

Dear Sian,

Please could you send a list of all EU Polar Scientists within the UK
Polar Network as we are trying to create a network of Polar Scientists
for the ICED programme (www.iced.ac.uk). It would also be useful if
the scientists could provide a brief summary of their research
interests in the Southern Ocean.

Many Thanks,
Emma Cross
Marine Ecologist
Ecosystems Programme
British Antarctic Survey
High Cross, Madingley Rd
Cambridge, UK CB3 0ET

Integrating Climate and Ecosystem Dynamics
Programme, www.iced.ac.uk

E-mail: iced@bas.ac.uk
Ph: +1223 221231


--
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.

Friday, November 4, 2011

FW: [APECS] APECS Conference Tips webpage available

_______________________________________________
Apecs mailing list
Apecs@tek.iarc.uaf.edu
http://tek.iarc.uaf.edu/mailman/listinfo/apecs

Hi everyone,

 

Below is another great resource from APECS that some of you will find useful.  It’s a really thorough guide to preparing you for conferences/session chairing.

 

Thanks,
Aisling

 

Apologies for cross-posting.

 

From: apecs-bounces@tek.iarc.uaf.edu [mailto:apecs-bounces@tek.iarc.uaf.edu] On Behalf Of APECS Director
Sent: 03 November 2011 20:27
To: apecs@tek.iarc.uaf.edu
Subject: [APECS] APECS Conference Tips webpage available

 

Hey APECS members!

 

Are you planning to attend your next conference? We all know that one of the most important parts of establishing a successful science career (or any career for that matter) is the networking of colleagues you create. Conferences are a great way to meet people, share your ideas, develop new projects, learn new techniques, find your next employer or employee, and sometimes even have a little fun :)

 

APECS has created a new resource for you that will help you navigate conferences! How do you write an abstract about your work? How to design your oral or poster presentation so you clearly and concisely share your research with others? What are some tips for you to remember when looking for funding to attend the conference? Are you a session convener / chair and need some guidance on the responsibilities that you have take on in this great leadership role? Or do you want to organize a side workshop or panel at the conference and need some tips and tricks on things to keep in mind in the planning process? Check out our new APECS Conference Tips webpage at http://apecs.is/conference-tips with some great advice on all of the questions above.

 

If you can think of anything we might have missed, please let us know at info@apecs.is

 

Cheers,

 

Gerlis, Luis and Jenny

 

 

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Antarctica Day 2011

Get involved with Antarctica Day 2011!  Have a Frozen Planet party, give a talk in a school or your department- we would love to hear what you get up to. Please see the message below from Julie for more ideas, fliers and how to prepare for Antarctica Day 2012!

 

Dear UKPN members,


I invite you to share your knowledge and enthusiasm for Antarctica with others on Antarctic Day December 1st. This is the day when the Antarctic Treaty was signed in 1959, and adopted "with the interests of science, and the progress of all mankind." Run in collaboration with APECS, it is sponsored by the Foundation for Good Governance of International Spaces (www.ourspaces.org.uk).  Each year we plan to build a broader network - to raise awareness about Antarctica and to celebrate this milestone of peace in our civilization with hope and inspiration for future generations.

 

We would love UKPN members to get involved! You can help others appreciate the importance of the science & international cooperation by organizing a lecture or outreach event at a school or in your community on that day. You can launch a virtual balloon from wherever you are to show that you love Antarctica (http://apecs.is/antarcticaday). You could even just have some friends over and watch an Antarctic-related movie or documentary (Encounters at the End of the World, Frozen Planet, or The Day After Tomorrow...whatever works for you). Look for more great ideas and teaching resources (from many countries) at apecs.is/antarcticaday or on our 2011 flier. And if you do have an event, please let us know about it and send along a couple photos, too!


And - looking forwards to Antarctica Day 2012 - we are building resources and power point presentations in many different languages are needed. If you would be interested in helping with educational outreach in your country for next year, I welcome you to contact me, Julie Hambrook Berkman (jberkman@ourspaces.org.uk). If you could quickly send me answers to the six questions below it will help me in preparing for next year.

  • What country are you working in?
  • What is the language of your country?
  • What months are the public schools in session during the year?
  • Where does December 1st fall in relation to student activities?
  • Do you have a power point or other set of materials that you could use to give an Antarctica Day presentation in the language of the country that you live in?
  •  Would you be interested in helping to coordinate activities in your country or where ever you are going to be next year?

 

Thank you,

Julie

 

Julie A Hambrook Berkman, PhD

Managing Director

Foundation for the Good Governance of International Spaces (Our Spaces)

38 Conduit Head Rd.

Cambridge CB3 0EY, UK

Mobile 44 (0)7800 589 163

FAX 44 (0) 1763836 321

jberkman@ourspaces.org.uk

www.ourspaces.org.uk

Charity registration no.1131454


_______________________________________________
Apecs mailing list
Apecs@tek.iarc.uaf.edu
http://tek.iarc.uaf.edu/mailman/listinfo/apecs


Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Presentation at the University of Bath

Potential opportunity for a UKPN member:


My team and I are finalists in a competition for students which involve running a go-green initiative on our university campus and around Bath. We now have just under six weeks to make as many people as possible at the University and around town thinking about saving energy.

 

One of our main goals is to invite speakers to the university and talk about climate change. I think this would be an interesting event for you as it offers you the chance to reach out to students who are interested in what is happening in Antarctica. The event will be held on Monday 28 November at the University of Bath, so if you have any speakers in mind that is free to do a 20 -25 minute presentation on that date, please let us know."

Are there are any members of UK Polar Network available on that date to do a presentation, preferably someone from the surrounding area?

I look forward to hearing from you. My team and I would appreciate your support.

Kind regards,

Mona Formoe
oneworldbath@gmail.com




Saturday, October 29, 2011

Explore 2011 - 18-20 November at the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)

Dear All,

Please find below information about the annual "Explore" expedition
and fieldwork planning weekend at the Royal Geographical Society (with
IBG). This year, there is a strong Arctic contingent (see below for
details) so the event is of particular interest to all those involved
in Arctic research and exploration. As this year's "Explore" is so
relevant to us polar people, the RGS has agreed to offer discounted
fees to UKPN members, provided there is enough interest. If you would
like to attend this year's "Explore", please reply to this email and I
will forward your details to the RGS so that we get the discounted
rates. We have also been invited to present a poster on UKPN
activities; if you would like to take a lead or contribute to this,
please let me know.

I look forward to hearing from you,

Sian

--

Explore is the annual expedition and fieldwork planning weekend held
at the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG). It is primarily aimed
towards students, although anyone planning an exciting overseas
project can attend. Each year we bring together around 100 leading
field researchers, explorers and adventurers to the Society to run
workshops and lectures designed to help and inspire the next
generation of researchers in organizing expeditions and overseas
research projects.

This year, we have a large number of speakers with experience in
arctic regions. These include; member of the Catlin Arctic Survey
team, Ann Daniels, Helen Findlay (also a UKPN member!); former base
commander at Rothera Research Station Paul Rose and glaciologist Simon
Carr. For details of all the speakers, including many more 'polar
experts', check out the website http://www.rgs.org/explore

Over the weekend, there will also be plenty of opportunities to
discuss some of the grants available from the RGS-IBG for student
expeditions. Full details of the event and information on many of the
speakers attending can be found at www.rgs.org/explore
<http://www.rgs.org/explore>.

Student fees are £65 for the weekend (Friday evening, Saturday and
Sunday), but if there is sufficient interest from UKPN members, the
RGS have agreed to give us a further discounted rate of just £55 for
the weekend!
--

Sian Henley
--
President, UK Polar Network

--
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.

Funding for your outreach activities

Dear UKPN,

Further to Laura's email about an outreach opportunity in Manchester,
there is exciting news about your education and outreach opportunities
across the UK. In partnership with the UK Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, the UK Polar Network can now provide financial support for
members to organise education and outreach initiatives of your own in
your local schools!

Grants of £50 - £200 are available for each school visit to cover your
expenses. The funding will be allocated on merit via a straightforward
application. Organising a polar-themed educational school visit is
great fun, hugely rewarding and very impressive on the all-important
CV. One of the key objectives of the UK Polar Network is to engage the
public about the importance of polar science through education and
outreach and we have an impressive track record of organising events
in schools, museums and science centres across the UK. We will support
you every step of the way in organising your own event!

If you are interested, please contact the UKPN committee for more
information com@polarnetwork.org

We look forward to hearing from you and helping you to inspire the
next generation of polar scientists!

Best wishes,

Sian Henley


--
President, UK Polar Network

--
The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

School Visit Opportunity in Manchester

Dear UKPN members, 

We have been approached and asked to take part in a school visit in Manchester. A year three class is studying the Arctic and would like someone to visit and talk about their experiences in the Polar Regions. 

If anyone is local to Manchester (or close enough to make the journey) and would like to get involved in this fantastic outreach opportunity, then please do let me know. It's a fantastic experience, and the UKPN has a whole host of resources and advice to anyone who has no experience in educational work!

Look forward to hearing back from you, and please just ask if you have any questions, 
Laura Hobbs
| BSc (Marine Biology & Oceanography) |
| MSc Student - Applied Marine Science |
| Outreach Co-ordinator, UK Polar Network |
T: 07854 319223

Friday, October 21, 2011

Arctic Field Grant 2012

Dear UKPN Members,

 

Below is a fantastic opportunity to obtain funding for fieldwork in Svalbard.

 

Thanks,

Aisling (UKPN)

 

***********************************************************

 

The Arctic Field Grant for 2012 is now open for applications. The deadline is November 20th 2011 at 16.00 and this year, for the first time, the grant is now also open to applicants from non-Norwegian institutions (in cooperation with a Norwegian institution). The Arctic Field grant is a great opportunity for students and researchers alike who aim to do fieldwork in Svalbard. See more details and apply online at:

 

http://www.svalbardscienceforum.no/pages/arktisstipend.htm

 

If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact us.

 

 

Best regards

 

Karoline Bælum, Svalbard Science Forum

 

 

 

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dr. Karoline Bælum

Svalbard Science Forum,
P.O. Box 506, N-9171 Longyearbyen
 
E-mail:
kab@rcn.no
Phone: +47 79 02 6486
Fax: +47 79 02 26 04

Web: www.svalbardscienceforum.no

 


**************************************************************

 

Aisling M. Dolan

PhD Student in Palaeoclimatology

 

School of Earth & Environment

University of Leeds

Leeds LS2 9JT

UK

 

Tel: +44 (0)113 343 9085

Email: eeamd@leeds.ac.uk

Homepage: http://homepages.see.leeds.ac.uk/~eeamd/

 

Arctic Science Conference: http://www.ukarcticscience.org/

UK Polar Network: http://www.polarnetwork.org/new/

 

 

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Wanted: Science Leader on Youth Expedition in Northern Norway

Hi UKPN,

The British Schools Exploring Society (BSES - http://www.bses.org.uk/)
is looking for science leaders on their Arctic Odyssey Expedition. You
can find out more about the expedition here
(http://www.bses.org.uk/Expeditions/Age1620/ArcticOdysseyExpeditionNorway2012.aspx),
and more about science leading here
(http://www.bses.org.uk/Expeditions/ExpeditionLeaders.aspx) including
the application form. In conjunction with an adventure programme, all
BSES expeditions include a scientific component - whether glacial,
biological, ecological, meteorological, or whatever you're interested
in!

If you're interested, fill out the application and send it to BSES (on
the expedition leaders page), or contact the expedition's chief leader
Les Turbull-Brown if you have questions (les.tb@live.co.uk).

I hope lots of you enjoy Norway! Best,
Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar

Monday, October 17, 2011

Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hi,

i'm interested in being involved, I have kit that I can bring and have been to the Antarctic and Arctic so can share photos, experiences etc.

Cheers,

Rosie

Rosemary Willatt

Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling (NCEO)
University College London
Gower St
London
WC1E 6BT
+44 (0)20 7679 4406

rcw@cpom.ucl.ac.uk


On 10 Oct 2011, at 16:35, Loxton, Jennifer L wrote:

> I would like to help out but will be down South with BAS at the time.
> However, if you want to have a "live Antarctic marine scientist" on
> e-mail or phone to answer kids questions then maybe I could be of help??
>
> Cheers
> Jen
>
>
> Jennifer L. Loxton
> Marine Biology PhD student
> Centre for Marine Biodiversity and Biotechnology
> School of Life Sciences
> John Muir Building
> Gait 1
> Heriot Watt University
> Edinburgh
> EH14 4AS
> Email: jll13@hw.ac.uk
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
> Behalf Of Scheffer, Annette
> Sent: 10 October 2011 15:13
> To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
> I would be interested in taking part and also do some organising, but as
> it will be the final phase of my PhD I can only do co-organising
> together with some others.
> I am working on penguins, that could be a nice topic for the
> festival...?
>
> Annette
>
> ________________________________________
> From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of
> Bracegirdle, Thomas J. [tjbra@BAS.AC.UK]
> Sent: 10 October 2011 14:53
> To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
> I'd also be interested in taking part in this - although all my research
> is done in front of a computer screen! I could pretend that I go to
> Antarctica.
>
> Tom
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
> Behalf Of Gales, Jenny
> Sent: 10 October 2011 11:24
> To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
> Hi Allen,
>
> I can help out with this if someone is willing to lead it.
>
> Sounds like a good opportunity!
>
> Jenny
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
> Behalf Of Allen Pope
> Sent: 07 October 2011 17:10
> To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
> Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,
>
> See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
> put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
> (which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
> able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
> slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
> a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
> look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.
>
> So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
> somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
> before the opportunity slips past.
>
> -Allen
> -----------------------------
> http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
> http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
> http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar
>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
> Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00
>
>
> Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
> Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
> is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
> Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 - 11
> years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
> and cultures.
>
> On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
> Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am - 3pm. This is where we invite
> Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
> experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
> day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
> have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
> become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
> their interests further in the future.
>
> To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
> wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
> would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
> suitable for children aged between 3 - 11 years old. We would
> appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
> just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
> throughout the day to support you.
>
> If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
> information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
> will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
> happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
> age range of our children.
>
> This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
> join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
> Federation.
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
>
> Cathy Dean
> Science co-ordinator and class teacher
> --
> This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
> is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
> of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
> it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
> NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.
>
>
> --
> Heriot-Watt University is a Scottish charity
> registered under charity number SC000278.
>
> Heriot-Watt University is the Sunday Times
> Scottish University of the Year 2011-2012

Monday, October 10, 2011

Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I'm keen as well, although having never participated in such a project
before, I'd probably be more useful in a contributing rather than
leading/managing role.

Cheers,

Jon

On Oct 10 2011, Loxton, Jennifer L wrote:

>I would like to help out but will be down South with BAS at the time.
>However, if you want to have a "live Antarctic marine scientist" on
>e-mail or phone to answer kids questions then maybe I could be of help??
>
>Cheers
>Jen
>
>
>Jennifer L. Loxton
>Marine Biology PhD student
>Centre for Marine Biodiversity and Biotechnology
>School of Life Sciences
>John Muir Building
>Gait 1
>Heriot Watt University
>Edinburgh
>EH14 4AS
>Email: jll13@hw.ac.uk
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
>Behalf Of Scheffer, Annette
>Sent: 10 October 2011 15:13
>To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
>I would be interested in taking part and also do some organising, but as
>it will be the final phase of my PhD I can only do co-organising
>together with some others.
>I am working on penguins, that could be a nice topic for the
>festival...?
>
>Annette
>
>________________________________________
>From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of
>Bracegirdle, Thomas J. [tjbra@BAS.AC.UK]
>Sent: 10 October 2011 14:53
>To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
>I'd also be interested in taking part in this - although all my research
>is done in front of a computer screen! I could pretend that I go to
>Antarctica.
>
>Tom
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
>Behalf Of Gales, Jenny
>Sent: 10 October 2011 11:24
>To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
>Hi Allen,
>
>I can help out with this if someone is willing to lead it.
>
>Sounds like a good opportunity!
>
>Jenny
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
>Behalf Of Allen Pope
>Sent: 07 October 2011 17:10
>To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>Subject: Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
>Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,
>
>See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
>put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
>(which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
>able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
>slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
>a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
>look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.
>
>So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
>somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
>before the opportunity slips past.
>
>-Allen
>-----------------------------
>http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
>http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
>http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar
>
>
>Begin forwarded message:
>
>From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
>Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00
>
>
>Science and Technology Learning Saturday
>
>Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
>is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
>Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 - 11
>years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
>and cultures.
>
>On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
>Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am - 3pm. This is where we invite
>Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
>experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
>day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
>have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
>become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
>their interests further in the future.
>
>To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
>wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
>would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
>suitable for children aged between 3 - 11 years old. We would
>appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
>just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
>throughout the day to support you.
>
>If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
>information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
>will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
>happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
>age range of our children.
>
>This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
>join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
>Federation.
>
>Yours sincerely,
>
>
>Cathy Dean
>Science co-ordinator and class teacher
>--
>This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
>is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
>of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
>it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
>NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.
>
>
>

Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I would like to help out but will be down South with BAS at the time.
However, if you want to have a "live Antarctic marine scientist" on
e-mail or phone to answer kids questions then maybe I could be of help??

Cheers
Jen


Jennifer L. Loxton
Marine Biology PhD student
Centre for Marine Biodiversity and Biotechnology
School of Life Sciences
John Muir Building
Gait 1
Heriot Watt University
Edinburgh
EH14 4AS
Email: jll13@hw.ac.uk

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
Behalf Of Scheffer, Annette
Sent: 10 October 2011 15:13
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I would be interested in taking part and also do some organising, but as
it will be the final phase of my PhD I can only do co-organising
together with some others.
I am working on penguins, that could be a nice topic for the
festival...?

Annette

________________________________________
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of
Bracegirdle, Thomas J. [tjbra@BAS.AC.UK]
Sent: 10 October 2011 14:53
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I'd also be interested in taking part in this - although all my research
is done in front of a computer screen! I could pretend that I go to
Antarctica.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
Behalf Of Gales, Jenny
Sent: 10 October 2011 11:24
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hi Allen,

I can help out with this if someone is willing to lead it.

Sounds like a good opportunity!

Jenny

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
Behalf Of Allen Pope
Sent: 07 October 2011 17:10
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,

See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
(which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.

So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
before the opportunity slips past.

-Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar


Begin forwarded message:

From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00


Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 - 11
years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
and cultures.

On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am - 3pm. This is where we invite
Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
their interests further in the future.

To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
suitable for children aged between 3 - 11 years old. We would
appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
throughout the day to support you.

If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
age range of our children.

This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
Federation.

Yours sincerely,


Cathy Dean
Science co-ordinator and class teacher
--
This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.


--
Heriot-Watt University is a Scottish charity
registered under charity number SC000278.

Heriot-Watt University is the Sunday Times
Scottish University of the Year 2011-2012

Re: Ever brush your teeth with SHAVING CREAM? I did it tonight. Egads, i was standing in my bathroom getting ready to go out and i wanted to brush my teeth so i grabbe what I thought was a toothpaste tube.....from the hotel where i stayed in Taipei last

good story, at least you do not keep you toothbrush together with pens and pencils on the table.=)


C уважением,
Ирина Жилина

Kindest regards,
Irina Zhilina

MA Polar Law Programme
University of Akureyri, Iceland

Tel: +354 776 33 79
E-mail: stonewood@list.ru
ha110007@unak.is


10 октября 2011, 19:17 от Dan Bloom <danbloom@GMAIL.COM>:
> Ever brush your teeth with SHAVING CREAM? I did it tonight. Egads, i
> was standing in my bathroom getting ready to go out and i wanted to
> brush my teeth so i grabbe what I thought was a toothpaste
> tube.....from the hotel where i stayed in Taipei last month.....and i
> put the bright white cream on my brush and started brushing......when
> suddenly, well slowly, i began to realize that the taste was not sweet
> not toothpaste or even salty like some toothpaste, but very strange
> texture and taste, like white PAINT almost,,,,and then i looked at the
> tube and OOPS it was shaving cream......OMIGDo...ever do that? i can
> still taste it....Yucko!~ FUNNY TOO
>

Ever brush your teeth with SHAVING CREAM? I did it tonight. Egads, i was standing in my bathroom getting ready to go out and i wanted to brush my teeth so i grabbe what I thought was a toothpaste tube.....from the hotel where i stayed in Taipei last

Ever brush your teeth with SHAVING CREAM? I did it tonight. Egads, i
was standing in my bathroom getting ready to go out and i wanted to
brush my teeth so i grabbe what I thought was a toothpaste
tube.....from the hotel where i stayed in Taipei last month.....and i
put the bright white cream on my brush and started brushing......when
suddenly, well slowly, i began to realize that the taste was not sweet
not toothpaste or even salty like some toothpaste, but very strange
texture and taste, like white PAINT almost,,,,and then i looked at the
tube and OOPS it was shaving cream......OMIGDo...ever do that? i can
still taste it....Yucko!~ FUNNY TOO

Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I would be interested in taking part and also do some organising, but as it will be the final phase of my PhD I can only do co-organising together with some others.
I am working on penguins, that could be a nice topic for the festival...?

Annette

________________________________________
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Bracegirdle, Thomas J. [tjbra@BAS.AC.UK]
Sent: 10 October 2011 14:53
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I'd also be interested in taking part in this - although all my research is done in front of a computer screen! I could pretend that I go to Antarctica.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Gales, Jenny
Sent: 10 October 2011 11:24
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hi Allen,

I can help out with this if someone is willing to lead it.

Sounds like a good opportunity!

Jenny

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Allen Pope
Sent: 07 October 2011 17:10
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,

See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
(which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.

So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
before the opportunity slips past.

-Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar


Begin forwarded message:

From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00


Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 - 11
years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
and cultures.

On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am - 3pm. This is where we invite
Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
their interests further in the future.

To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
suitable for children aged between 3 - 11 years old. We would
appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
throughout the day to support you.

If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
age range of our children.

This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
Federation.

Yours sincerely,


Cathy Dean
Science co-ordinator and class teacher
--
This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.

Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

I'd also be interested in taking part in this - although all my research is done in front of a computer screen! I could pretend that I go to Antarctica.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Gales, Jenny
Sent: 10 October 2011 11:24
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hi Allen,

I can help out with this if someone is willing to lead it.

Sounds like a good opportunity!

Jenny

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Allen Pope
Sent: 07 October 2011 17:10
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,

See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
(which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.

So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
before the opportunity slips past.

-Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar


Begin forwarded message:

From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00


Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 - 11
years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
and cultures.

On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am - 3pm. This is where we invite
Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
their interests further in the future.

To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
suitable for children aged between 3 - 11 years old. We would
appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
throughout the day to support you.

If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
age range of our children.

This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
Federation.

Yours sincerely,


Cathy Dean
Science co-ordinator and class teacher
--
This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.

Re: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hi Allen,

I can help out with this if someone is willing to lead it.

Sounds like a good opportunity!

Jenny

-----Original Message-----
From: UK Polar Network Mailing List [mailto:UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Allen Pope
Sent: 07 October 2011 17:10
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,

See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
(which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.

So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
before the opportunity slips past.

-Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar


Begin forwarded message:

From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00


Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 - 11
years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
and cultures.

On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am - 3pm. This is where we invite
Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
their interests further in the future.

To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
suitable for children aged between 3 - 11 years old. We would
appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
throughout the day to support you.

If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
age range of our children.

This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
Federation.

Yours sincerely,


Cathy Dean
Science co-ordinator and class teacher
--
This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC
is subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents
of this email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless
it is exempt from release under the Act. Any material supplied to
NERC may be stored in an electronic records management system.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Hey UKPN Folks around Cambridge,

See below, but this could be a good opportunity for a couple people to
put together a Science Festival - type activity for school groups
(which UKPN has experience doing). And maybe some BAS folks might be
able to get some kit/penguins/ice to bring along? We could do
slideshows, have people try on polar kit, do a "workshop" on building
a polar station, play with fake glacier goo, make maps of antarctica,
look at sea level rise, or many other ideas.

So - anybody keen to take lead on this? Or just want to participate if
somebody else can organise it? Let me know! Let's act on this soon
before the opportunity slips past.

-Allen
-----------------------------
http://www.spri.cam.ac.uk/people/pope
http://sites.google.com/site/apope00/
http://www.twitter.com/PopePolar


Begin forwarded message:

From: Dean Catherine <CDean@Queenedith.cambs.sch.uk>
Date: 2 October 2011 17:42:07 GMT+01:00


Science and Technology Learning Saturday

Queen Edith is a large primary school in the South of Cambridge, which
is part of the Queens' Federation with the newly opened Queen Emma
Primary School. Queen Edith has more than 450 children aged 3 – 11
years old, including children with a wide range of different languages
and cultures.

On Saturday 28th January 2012 we will be holding a Science and
Technology Learning Saturday, from 10am – 3pm. This is where we invite
Queen Edith and Queen Emma children, and their families, to come and
experience hands on learning. We want children to have an exciting
day, providing them with many opportunities they would not otherwise
have the chance to experience. The aim is to motivate children to
become curious about Science and Technology, ask questions and pursue
their interests further in the future.

To make this possible we are asking for your help. We are contacting a
wide variety of local companies, societies and parents, who we think
would be able to run an activity, workshop or give demonstrations,
suitable for children aged between 3 – 11 years old. We would
appreciate any time you are willing to donate to us, whether it is
just one hour or a whole day. Teachers will of course be available
throughout the day to support you.

If you would like to be involved, or want to find out more
information, please contact me on cdean@queenedith.cambs.sch.uk. I
will be happy to answer any questions you have and I am also very
happy to help you tailor your particular skills to an activity for the
age range of our children.

This is sure to be a very exciting day, and we hope you are able to
join us to further develop Science and Technology at the Queens'
Federation.

Yours sincerely,


Cathy Dean
Science co-ordinator and class teacher

Re: Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change in the Arctic

may i participte re POLAR CITIES RESEARCH INSTITUTE ideas?

http://pcillu101.blogspot.com

or is this too radical for your project to consider?

Dan BLoOM

On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 3:40 PM, Ilan Kelman <ilan_kelman@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change in the Arctic
>
> I am involved in a project "Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change
> in the Arctic" continuing the work from 2008
> http://www.sdwg.org/content.php?doc=85 The intention is to identify and
> collect specific suggestions for policy and action regarding climate change
> vulnerability and adaptation in the Arctic. The project is funded by the
> Norwegian Ministries of Environment and Foreign Affairs, with the audience
> being the Norwegian government to advise them on what they could do
> regarding vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in the Arctic at
> local, national, and regional levels. We are seeking input from everywhere
> around the Arctic to ensure that wide perspectives and contexts are
> considered.
>
> If you would wish to be involved, with opinions being most welcome, then
> options are:
>
> 1. Please reply to some or all of the questions below via email to me
> directly.
>
> 2. Please comment to this list.
>
> 3. Please let me know if you wish to chat via skype or me phoning you.
>
> The questions are also available in Russian and Norwegian. Any answers might
> be reported in the public domain but you can choose whether or not to
> remain anonymous (if no indication is given, we assume that you prefer to be
> anonymous). We are seeking feedback by the end of October.
>
> Thank you very much for any input,
>
> Ilan
>
> ---
>
> Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change in the Arctic
>
> Core questions
>
> 1. What would you suggest about specific policies and actions for
> vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in the Arctic?
>
> (a) What is the policy or action?
>
> (b) Who will implement the policy or action? Who is affected by it? Are
> local, national, and regional levels covered?
>
> (c) On what timeframe should the policy or action be implemented? To what
> timeframe does it apply?
>
> (d) What resources (time, money) are needed for those involved?
>
> (e) Is your advice based on your own opinion (which is most welcome) or
> would you wish to provide supporting documentation?
>
> 2. Out of the policies and actions that you mentioned, which are really
> needed, being essential to survival of Arctic communities and peoples under
> climate change? Which are hoped for?
>
> ---
> Demographic data (optional)
>
> 3. Do you wish to remain anonymous?
>
> 4. If not, then what data could you provide:
>
> (a) Name
>
> (b) Nationality/cultural background
>
> (c) Contact information for follow ups (e-mail and telephone number)
>
> (d) Place where living
>
> (e) Place where working/position
>
> (f) Interest in the Arctic (research? livelihood? personal experience?)
>
> ---
> If you wish to provide more information (optional)
>
> 5. What is your interest in and knowledge about Norway's Arctic policies
> and actions focused on vulnerability and adaptation to climate change?
>
> 6. Do you have any specific geographic interests in the Arctic (examples
> could be regions, countries, islands, towns, districts, counties, or however
> else you wish to describe you place-based interests).
>
> 7. Do you have any specific sectoral interests in the Arctic?
>
> 8. Within the specific geographic and sectoral interests you have mentioned,
> what are, the greatest climate change challenges and opportunities?

--
DANNY GRADUATION SPEECH TO CLASS OF 2011...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-wnrm2jE-E

DANNY ON UNPLUGGING SOMETIMES....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9xpN78-cJP0