Thursday, December 27, 2012

Fwd: Antarctic lake mission called off

Just for your interest... 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Stevens, Audrey E.H.
Date: Thursday, 27 December 2012
Subject: Antarctic lake mission called off
To: "Garabato, Alberto N." <acng@noc.soton.ac.uk>, Alexis Janosik <janosam@auburn.edu>, Ana Quartin <Ana.Quartin@fct.mctes.pt>, Andrew Brierley <asb4@st-andrews.ac.uk>, Andrew Constable <Andrew.constable@acecrc.org.au>, Andrew Wright <andrew_wright@ccamlr.org>, Andy Shepherd <A.Shepherd@leeds.ac.uk>, Andy Watson <a.watson@uea.ac.uk>, Annick Wilmotte <awilmotte@ulg.ac.be>, Antonio Quesada <antonio.quesada@uam.es>, APECS <president@polarnetwork.org>, b webber <b.webber@uea.ac.uk>, Bernie Funston <Bernard.funston@polarcom.gc.ca>, Bob Bindschadler <Robert.a.bindschadler@nasa.gov>, Carol Robinson <carol.robinson@uea.ac.uk>, Cedric Chavanne <cedric_chavanne@uqar.ca>, Chris Rapley <christopher.rapley@ucl.ac.uk>, Corrine le Quere <c.lequere@uea.ac.uk>, d stevens <d.stevens@uea.ac.uk>, Davey Jones <d.jones@bangor.ac.uk>, David Agnew <d.agnew@imperial.ac.uk>, David Barbeau <dbarbeau@geol.sc.edu>, David Barber <dbarber@ms.umanitoba.ca>, David Drewry <david.drewry@hull.ac.uk>, David Fritts <dave@cora.nwra.com>, David Hopkins <david.hopkins@hw.ac.uk>, Dougal Goodman <dougal.goodman@foundation.org.uk>, Edward Kragh <edkragh@slb.com>, Eric Rignot <erignot@uci.edu>, George Watters <George.Watters@noaa.gov>, Ian Allison <Ian.Allison@utas.edu.au>, Ian Dunn <Ian@gct.org>, Irene Tan <itan@um.edu.my>, Jan Strugnell <J.Strugnell@latrobe.edu.au>, Jane Francis <j.e.francis@leeds.ac.uk>, Janek Jania <jam.jania@gmail.com>, Jean de Pomereu <jean@jeandepomereu.com>, Jelte Rozema <jelte.rozema@ecology.falw.vu.nl>, "Batchelor, Jessica" <jetc@nerc.ac.uk>, John Dudeney <j.dudeney@btinternet.com>, John Pethica <john.pethica@royalsociety.org>, Jon Turton <jon.turton@metoffice.gov.uk>, Jose Xavier <jccx@cantab.net>, Julian Dowdeswell <jd16@hermes.cam.ac.uk>, Jyrki Manninen <Jyrki.Manninen@sgo.fi>, Konrad Steffen <Konrad.Steffen@colorado.edu>, Lars Otto Reiersen <lars-otto.reiersen@amap.no>, Liz Morris <emm36@cam.ac.uk>, Louis Fortier <Louis.fortier@bio.ulaval.ca>, Magnus Tannerfeldt <magnus.tannerfeldt@polar.se>, Mark Brandon <m.a.brandon@open.ac.uk>, Martin Siegert <m.j.siegert@bristol.ac.uk>, Michael Lewis <Michael.lewis@swri.org>, Michiel van den Broek <m.r.vandenbroeke@uu.nl>, Mika Kalakosi <mika.kalakoski@fmi.fi>, Mike Bentley <m.j.bentley@durham.ac.uk>, Mike Fedak <maf3@st-andrews.ac.uk>, Mike Hambrey <mjh@aber.ac.uk>, Mike Sparrow <mds68@cam.ac.uk>, Morten Rasch <mras@dmu.dk>, Nick Owens <njpo@sahfos.ac.uk>, PAME WG <pame@pame.is>, Paul Brennan <p.brennan@ucl.ac.uk>, Paul Valdes <p.j.valdes@bristol.ac.uk>, Pavel Prosek <prosek@sci.muni.cz>, Peter Clarke <peter.clarke@newcastle.ac.uk>, Peter Williams <peter.williams@royalsociety.org>, Piotr Glowacki <glowacki@igf.edu.pl>, Rene Forsberg <rf@space.dtu.dk>, Richard Gieder <geider@essex.ac.uk>, Rob Bingham <r.bingham@abdn.ac.uk>, Robin Bell <robinb@ldeo.columbia.edu>, Seymour Laxton <swl@cpom.ucl.ac.uk>, Sridhar Anandakrishnan <sak@essc.psu.edu>, stefanie kaiser <stefanie.kaiser@uni-hamburg.de>, "McPhail, Stephen D." <sdm@noc.ac.uk>, Susan Hanson <sha@dmi.dk>, Svein Osterhus <svein.osterhus@uni.no>, Tan Koh Siang <tmstanks@nus.edu.sg>, Tavi Murray <t.murray@swansea.ac.uk>, Thomas Saucede <thomas.saucede@u-bourgogne.fr>, Tim Jickells <t.jickells@uea.ac.uk>, Tom Caff <tom@caff.is>, tony Fleming <tony.fleming@aad.gov.au>, Tony Payne <a.j.payne@bristol.ac.uk>, Tony Press <tony.press@acecrc.org.au>, Warren Papworth <warren.papworth@acap.aq>, Wim Vyverman <Wim.Vyverman@ugent.be>
Cc: "Capper, Linda M." <lmca@bas.ac.uk>, "Martin, Heather L." <hert@bas.ac.uk>, "Hill, Christopher S." <cshi@bas.ac.uk>, "Bucktrout, Pete" <pbu@bas.ac.uk>, "m.j.siegert@bristol.ac.uk" <m.j.siegert@bristol.ac.uk>


Media Advisory
Antarctic lake mission called off
*Immediate release *
Issued Thursday 27 December 2012                                                                  
 
In the early hours of Christmas Day (Tuesday 25 December 2012) Professor Martin Siegert, Principal Investigator of the Subglacial Lake Ellsworth experiment, confirmed that the mission to drill into the lake has been called off for this Antarctic season.  Drilling was proceeding well during the weekend after a replacement part was fitted to the boiler used to heat water for drilling.  
 
Drilling stopped after the team was unable to form properly the water-filled cavity 300 metres beneath the ice.  This cavity was to link the main borehole with a secondary borehole used to recirculate drilling water back to the surface. 
 
Professor Siegert said,
 
"On Christmas Eve we took the decision to cease our efforts to directly measure and sample Subglacial Lake Ellsworth.  Although circumstances have not worked out as we would have wished, I am confident that through the huge efforts of the field team, and our colleagues in the UK, we have done as much as we possibly could have done, and I sincerely thank them all. I am also hugely grateful to the UK Natural Environment Research Council for making it possible for us to attempt the direct exploration of subglacial Antarctica. Sixteen years ago, we hypothesised that deep-water subglacial lakes are viable habitats for life, and contain important records of ice and climate history. For now, these hypotheses remain untested. Once back in the UK I will gather our consortium to seek ways in which our research efforts may continue. I remain confident that we will unlock the secrets of Lake Ellsworth in coming seasons."
 
The first borehole was drilled to a depth of 300m and then left at that depth for 12 hours to create the cavity. The second, main borehole (located 2m away from the first) was then drilled to 300m depth and should have immediately connected with this cavity.  This main borehole would then continue through the cavity and down to the lake while the first borehole would be used to recirculate water back to the surface using a submersible pump.  In this way, the ice cavity can be used to balance the level of water in the boreholes and hence balance the pressure from the lake upon breakthrough.
 
For reasons that are yet to be determined the team could not establish a link between the two boreholes at 300m depth, despite trying for over 20 hours.  During this process, hot water seeped into the porous surface layers of ice and was lost.  The team attempted to replenish this water loss by digging and melting more snow, but their efforts could not compensate.   The additional time taken to attempt to establish the cavity link significantly depleted the fuel stocks to such a level as to render the remaining operation unviable. Reluctantly the team had no option but to discontinue the programme for this season.
 
Professor Siegert continues,
 
"This is of course, hugely frustrating for us, but we have learned a lot this year.  By the end the equipment was working well, and much of it has now been fully field tested.  A full report on the field season will be compiled when the engineers and programme manager return to UK."
 
The Lake Ellsworth Consortium is funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).  It features two of NERC's Centers of Excellence – British Antarctic Survey and the National Oceanography Centre – and nine UK universities.
 
For more information about the mission see www.ellsworth.org.uk
 
ENDS
 
Issued by the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) Press Office on behalf of the Subglacial Lake Ellsworth consortium:
Audrey Stevens, Tel: +44 (0)1223 221414; Mobile: 07736 921 693; Email: auev@bas.ac.uk
Linda Capper, Tel: +44 (0)1223 221448; Mobile: 07714 233744; Email: lmca@bas.ac.uk
Heather Martin, Tel: +44 (0)1223 221226; Mobile: 07740 822229; Email: hert@bas.ac.uk 
 
 
Audrey Stevens
PR & Education Officer
Communications Team
British Antarctic Survey
High Cross, Madingley Road
Cambridge
CB3 0ET
 
Tel: + 44 (0) 1223 221414
Fax: +44 (0) 1223 302093
 
Visit our website: www.antarctica.ac.uk
Twitter: @BAS_News
 
 

  ________________________________  
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.



--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Update: International Polar Foundation Workshop - Oxford 7th Feb 2013

If interested in the workshop below, please contact Helen Turton at
cze.uk@polarfoundation.org

Also, IPF are looking for a polar scientist to assist with their
workshop being held at Dundee Science Centre in March. If you are
located in that sort of area, and interested then please contact me.

Ella

Dear UKPN

The International Polar Foundation (IPF) are running a free outreach
workshop in Oxford on 7th February 2013, 2-5pm.

This workshop demonstates the fantastic interactive resources that
they have on offer to bring polar science to life. These workshops
attract teachers who want to run polar sessions in their school.
However, the IPF are also running sessions at science centres around
the country, which the UKPN are helping to facilitate. If you are
interested in outreach, without having plan it yourself, these science
centre events pose a great opportunity. Otherwise the workshops shows
the resources that you can use for your own outreach events. This is a
brilliant opportunity to share ideas and play with giant, 3D polar
maps!

Please contact Helen at cze.uk@polarfoundation.org to register your place.

I recently went to their Derby workshop. It was really inspiring and
very useful; I highly recommend it!

All the best,

Ella

--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network


--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

International Polar Foundation Workshop - Oxford 7th Feb 2013

Dear UKPN

The International Polar Foundation (IPF) are running a free outreach
workshop in Oxford on 7th February 2013, 2-5pm.

This workshop demonstates the fantastic interactive resources that
they have on offer to bring polar science to life. These workshops
attract teachers who want to run polar sessions in their school.
However, the IPF are also running sessions at science centres around
the country, which the UKPN are helping to facilitate. If you are
interested in outreach, without having plan it yourself, these science
centre events pose a great opportunity. Otherwise the workshops shows
the resources that you can use for your own outreach events. This is a
brilliant opportunity to share ideas and play with giant, 3D polar
maps!

Please contact Helen at helenturton007@btinternet.com to register your place.

I recently went to their Derby workshop. It was really inspiring and
very useful; I highly recommend it!

All the best,

Ella

--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Monday, December 17, 2012

PostDoc Position at Innsbruck University (Austria)

Hello UKPN,

An exciting PostDoc opportunity!!

Amélie

PostDoc position on snow/ice energy balance modelling and mesoscale meteorology

The Institute of Meteorology and Geophysics (University of Innsbruck,
Austria) offers a 14 month postdoc position in the fields of glacier energy balance modelling and mesoscale meteorology. Please see <http://www.uibk.ac.at/index.html.en> for primary information on the University, the Institute and the general environment.

Applicants are expected to continue ongoing research on spatially distributed modelling of snow/ice surface exchange processes in Arctic glacier environments. This will build on extended analysis of glaciological and meteorological data collected at a Svalbard glacier during the last years and/or output from mesoscale atmospheric models.
The position therefore calls for demonstrated meteorological background and experience in numerical modelling. Previous work on Arctic meteorology and/or glaciers is welcome, as well as cooperativeness to develop research perspectives beyond the current job opening.

The position is related to an ESF-PolarClimate research project and is funded by the Austrian Science Fund. For details on these projects please watch <www.Svalglac.eu>. or <http://www.fwf.ac.at/en/abstracts/abstract.asp?L=E&PROJ=I369>.

Funding is currently secured to support a 14 month full employment according to national standards. Flexible distribution of work and salary is conceivable upon mutual agreement, but extension beyond summer
2014 depends on additional funding.

Applications or further inquiries may be sent to
(<friedrich.obleitner@uibk.ac.at>) and will be given full consideration until January 31. Thereby please include your CV and contacts of two professional referees.



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.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Final reminder: DACA-13 Symposium: Publication and Stipend opportunities

Dear All,

This is a final reminder for this great opportunity for members of
APECS/UKPN. Please find full details from APECS President, Penelope
Wagner, below. The deadline is on Friday.

Good luck!

Sian
--
Vice-President, UK Polar Network



Dear APECS members,
I would like to bring your attention to a fantastic
opportunity for early career scientists to participate in the Davos
Atmosphere and Cryosphere Assembly 2013 (DACA-13) which is a joint
assembly of The International Association of Meteorology and
Atmospheric Sciences (IAMAS) and the International Association of
Cryospheric Sciences (IACS), both Associations of the International
Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) to focus on "Air, Ice & Process
Interactions." For more information you can go to the website at:
http://www.daca-13.org/index_EN. Not only does this conference
encourage early career scientist participation, you will also get the
chance to prime your own research or partake in many other research
opportunities in preparation for a publication in the Annals of
Glaciology for the International Glaciological Socitey (IGS) meeting
in Hobart, Tasmania in March 2014. Additionally, you will get the
chance to participate in the APECS events which will facilitate
greater interactions and discussions about your research with other
members, as well as mentors during this meeting.

There is a potential for travel reimbursements for
early career scientists for the DACA-13 but funding is limited. The
following describes the eligibility of potential funding candidates
and further information on the funding procedure:

- Go to the website:
http://www.daca-13.ch/AbstractSubmission/index_EN):

- First register and chose your affiliation (i.e. IACS or IAMAS )

- Applicants will pay a non-refundable abstract handling fee of
CHF 30.- which will provide a login to submit your abstract.

- Within the abstract submission system, there is a button to
apply for travel grants: a short motivation letter, a short CV as
well as a list of publications are required.

The stipends are expected to subsidize registration and accommodation
costs for those who are eligible. There will be the possibility to
rent/share apartments in Davos, which will result in lower lodging
costs as well. Additionally, the youth hostel has multi-occupancy
rooms at affordable rates.

The deadline to apply for this is December 14, 2012 and all students
must submit an abstract by this date to be eligible for funding.
Please register at the conference website:
http://www.daca-13.org/registration/index_EN.

More information will follow on the planned APECS workshop prior to
this conference!

We look forward to seeing you there and if you have any questions
regarding this please contact me at penelope@udel.edu and/or Yulia
Zaika at yzaika@inbox.ru.

Best Regards,

Penny

Penelope Wagner, APECS President
Graduate Student
University of Delaware| Geography Department
http://udel.edu/~penelope/



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

Friday, December 7, 2012

Stipend opportunities to attend DACA-13

Apologies for any cross posting, but I thought this is an opportunity
that might interest many of you.

Ella


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: penelope wagner <penelopewagner@live.com>
Date: 7 December 2012 02:11
Subject: Invitation to attend the Davos Atmosphere and Cryosphere
Assembly - Publication and stipend opportunites!!
To: sea ice apecs list serv <seaice@apecs.is>, glaciology@apecs.is,
climate@apecs.is, ocean@apecs.is
Cc: Yulia Zaika <yzaika@inbox.ru>, Alexey Pavlov
<alexey.pavlov@apecs.is>, Cathy Geiger <cgeiger@udel.edu>, Charles
Fierz <fierz@slf.ch>


Invitation to attend DACA-13 Symposium for APECS members. Publication
and stipend opportunities!!!


Dear APECS members,


I would like to bring your attention to a fantastic
opportunity for early career scientists to participate in the Davos
Atmosphere and Cryosphere Assembly 2013 (DACA-13) which is a joint
assembly of The International Association of Meteorology and
Atmospheric Sciences (IAMAS) and the International Association of
Cryospheric Sciences (IACS), both Associations of the International
Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) to focus on "Air, Ice & Process
Interactions." For more information you can go to the website at:
http://www.daca-13.org/index_EN. Not only does this conference
encourage early career scientist participation, you will also get the
chance to prime your own research or partake in many other research
opportunities in preparation for a publication in the Annals of
Glaciology for the International Glaciological Socitey (IGS) meeting
in Hobart, Tasmania in March 2014. Additionally, you will get the
chance to participate in the APECS events which will facilitate
greater interactions and discussions about your research with other
members, as well as mentors during this meeting.


There is a potential for travel reimbursements for
early career scientists for the DACA-13 but funding is limited. The
following describes the eligibility of potential funding candidates
and further information on the funding procedure:


- Go to the website: http://www.daca-13.ch/AbstractSubmission/index_EN):

- First register and chose your affiliation (i.e. IACS or IAMAS )

- Applicants will pay a non-refundable abstract handling fee of
CHF 30.- which will provide a login to submit your abstract.

- Within the abstract submission system, there is a button to
apply for travel grants: a short motivation letter, a short CV as
well as a list of publications are required.


The stipends are expected to subsidize registration and accommodation
costs for those who are eligible. There will be the possibility to
rent/share apartments in Davos, which will result in lower lodging
costs as well. Additionally, the youth hostel has multi-occupancy
rooms at affordable rates.

The deadline to apply for this is December 14, 2012 and all students
must submit an abstract by this date to be eligible for funding.
Please register at the conference website:
http://www.daca-13.org/registration/index_EN.


More information will follow on the planned APECS workshop prior to
this conference!


We look forward to seeing you there and if you have any questions
regarding this please contact me at penelope@udel.edu and/or Yulia
Zaika at yzaika@inbox.ru.


Best Regards,


Penny



Penelope Wagner, APECS President
Graduate Student
University of Delaware| Geography Department
http://udel.edu/~penelope/



--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Women in Science and the Media Course: 4-6 January 2013, Windsor

There is a training opportunity focussed at women in science, although men are also welcome, in Windsor 4-6th January. The course culminates in a simulated broadcast at the BBC's national radio studios at Broadcasting House in London.
Topics will include:
- key issues and problems faced by women in science
- posture, body language and appearance:
common mistakes, how to spot them and how to fix them
- how to grab your audience's attention, be credible and be incredible
- the relationship between science, the public and the media
- what journalism is and how it applies to your science

More information and registration can be found at: http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/wcas/events/communicationandimpact/

--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Friday, November 23, 2012

Fwd: Publicity for an expedition opportunity

An opportunity which may be of interest to UKPN members:
---

*Applications are now open for the 2013 Tunsbergdalsbreen expedition. Email norway@brathayexploration.org.uk for more information and an application pack. The closing date is January 15th 2013.*

The Tunsbergdalsbreen project is a ongoing study to survey the health of the Tunsberg glacier - the biggest (18km) outlet glacier of the Jostedal icecap in Western Norway. Although this is not a polar expedition, it is a great introductory expedition for Undergraduate and Masters students who have an interest in glaciology, geomorphology and geosciences in general or for people who love the outdoors and want a challenge! Training is included in the expedition so no experience is necessary. The field work includes measuring the velocity, volume and snout position of the lower section of the glacier, and the geomorphology of the proglacial area. It is possible to use the site for dissertation data collection while on the expedition - just get in touch to discuss this.

The project is a joint project between Brathay Exploration Group, the Field
Studies Council, Newcastle University and the Norwegian Glacier museum.

For more information check out http://www.brathayexploration.org.uk/index.php/features/norway or email norway@brathayexploration.org.uk

Katy Boreham (expedition coordinator 2013)

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

EGU 2013 Session Announcement: Climate response to orbital forcing

Hi Everyone,

 

With apologies for cross-posting, I would like to draw your attention to the following session at the EGU General Assembly in 2013 (07-12 April 2013).

 

CL 1.4 Climate response to orbital forcing

http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2013/session/12282

Convenors: Erin McClymont, Alan Haywood and Aisling Dolan

 

For those of you who work on the history of the cryosphere, it might be the perfect session for you.  If not, it is worth remembering the deadline for student financial support for EGU is fast approaching (30th November 2012).

 

The session will include an invited presentation by Michel Crucifix (Universite catholique de Louvain) “Global sensitivity analysis: a systematic approach to estimate regional effects of the astronomical forcing”

 

The session outline is provided below. The final abstract deadline is 09 January 2013, but where financial support is sought this deadline is 30 November 2012.

 

The pacing of the global climate system by orbital variations is clearly demonstrated in the timing of glacial-interglacial cycles, but the mechanisms that translate this forcing into regional and global climate changes continue to be debated. We invite submissions that explore the climate system response to orbital forcing, that seek to support or refute the traditional Milankovitch view of a northern hemisphere ice-sheet control, and that test the stability of these relationships under different climate regimes or across evolving climate states (e.g. mid Pleistocene transition, Pliocene-Pleistocene transition, Miocene vs Pliocene). Submissions exploring proxy data and/or modelling work are welcomed.

This session has two partner sessions: "Modelling paleoclimates from the Cretaceous to the Holocene: learning from numerical experiments and model-data comparisons (organised by D. Lunt et al.) and "Paleo models and data - lessons for the future" (organised by J. Hargreaves et al).

 

Thanks,

Aisling Dolan

 

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

 

Aisling M. Dolan

ERC Research Fellow

 

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/

 

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

APECS: www.apecs.is

 

 

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Celebrate Antartica Day 2012!

Dear UKPN

Polar Educators International invite you to share your knowledge and enthusiasm for Antarctica with others on Antarctic Day this 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."  Coordinated by the Foundation for Good Governance of International Spaces (http://www.ourspaces.org.uk/) in collaboration with APECS, PolarTREC and Polar Educators International (PEI) we are engaging in new activities.  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.


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

Check out all the opportunities to get involved!

PolarTREC is hosting a live PolarConnect event! 
US Teacher Michael Lebaron will connect with classrooms to celebrate Antarctica Day from McMurdo Station, Antarctica! 
3 December 2012 at 9:30am AKST [10:30am PST, 11:30am MST, 12:30pm CST, 1:30pm EST] Participation is free and easy.
http://www.polartrec.com/polar-connect/register


There will be a flag ceremony in Antarctica with Antarctica Day flag designs made by students, and we hope to have as many countries represented as possible. See translations in 12 languages http://apecs.is/outreach/antarctica-day/antarctica-day-2012/flagship-activity so please find a school near you and share your perspectives along with the power point available at Our Spaces Antarctica Day 2012http://www.ourspaces.org.uk/ .


You can launch a virtual balloon from wherever you are to show that you love Antarctica (http://apecs.is/outreach/antarctica-day/antarctica-day-2012/launch-a-balloon) Let us know your activities and plans for Antarctica Day 2013!


For inspiration watch for the release of PEI 's Antarctica Day video, stay tuned Nov 29th.


Look for more great ideas and teaching resources (from many countries) at http://apecs.is/outreach/antarctica-day/antarctica-day-2012, http://www.ourspaces.org.uk/, andhttp://www.polartrec.com/resources


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


--
Polar Educators International [PEI] - A global professional network for those that educate in, for, and about the Polar Regions.





--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Monday, November 19, 2012

International Polar Foundation E&O Training Opportunity- Free

Dear UKPN
 
The International Polar Foundation are bringing their innovative E&O workshops to science centres around the UK. The UKPN has been working with the IPF to form a collaboration so we can join them in running these hands on workshops.
 
The first planned training session is for the Midlands and Derbyshire regions:
Wednesday 28 Nov 2012: 2pm-4pm      Kedleston Road Training Centre, Derby
 
There is more information attached. To book your free place please contact Helen at: helenturton007@btinternet.com and let her know you are from UKPN
 
The workshop training event will focus on demonstrating the resources, and will cover practicalities (eg transportation/assembly of items, preparations required), opportunity to book the workshop for own venues, and answer any questions.
 
This is a great opportunity to get involved with outreach, and to find out about how you can be involved with their science centre events. They're even looking to use the Olympic Park!
 
I hope to see you there,
 
Ella
 
 
--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Drinks at the RGS - Fwd: Fieldwork and Expedition Planning Weekend

Hello all,

For those who are attending Explore this weekend, and for our members who are London based, there will be the chance to meet and greet fellow UKPN members over a drink at the Royal Geographic Society Pay Bar following the exciting Friday night lecture! It looks to be a great presentation by Sarah Outen from 6:30 onwards, after which I hope to see as many of you there as possible. The lecture is free to pre-registered Explore delegates, and for non-delegates there is a £5 donation on the door.

There is still a chance to come along to this fantastic weekend, but you only have a couple of days left to book! Remember there is a discounted rate of £55 for UK Polar Network members. 

The nearest tube stations to The RGS (2 Kensington Gore) are South Kensington or Knightsbridge. 

Hopefully we shall see you this weekend!

Tom Perriment

E&O Coordinator

From: Thomas Perriment <tomperriment72@AOL.COM>
Date: 12 November 2012 12:50:02 GMT
To: UKPN@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Fieldwork and Expedition Planning Weekend  - Explore at the RGS 16th to 18th of November!
Reply-To: Thomas Perriment <tomperriment72@AOL.COM>

Dear UK Polar Network,

Just a gentle reminder that the Explore weekend at the Royal Geographic Society is only 5 DAYS AWAY! 

This Saturday and Sunday (with a Friday night lecture for those who can make it), the RGS (London) is hosting lectures, workshops and exhibits to help organise your own field research project or expedition in a variety of environments and disciplines. Over 90 leading field scientists and explorers provide inspiration, contacts and advice over the course of this unique weekend. It is the perfect place to start something new or gain advice on an existing project from the experts themselves through both group discussions or one to one chats.

The basis for Explore isn't about what you have done, it is about what you will do.

I will be there alongside Laura Hobbs flying the UKPN flag high and mighty, as will numerous other UKPN members, so book up and show your faces! The RGS has kindly offered a discount to our ever expanding network, so be sure to mention that you are one of us when booking the weekend to get a weekend pass for just £55 (you even get your own name badge when you get there, because we care). 

Details regarding going out for a UKPN meal/beer(s) to come shortly, at which of course every UKPN member is more than welcome, regardless of Explore attendance! So if you can get to London this weekend, or are based there already, make sure your crack up for this exciting opportunity.

Link is below for more info and hopefully we will see you there!


All the best,

Tom Perriment

UKPN E&O Coordinator

P.S. Don't forget the discount!

Monday, November 12, 2012

Various POGO training opportunities for 2013

There are oceanographic opportunities available from the Partnership for Observation of the Global Oceans (POGO) to join research cruises in 2013.

 

Please see below for further information.

 

Ella

 

From: news-owner@ocean-partners.org [mailto:news-owner@ocean-partners.org] On Behalf Of POGO Secretariat
Sent: 07 November 2012 10:25
To: news@ocean-partners.org
Subject: Various POGO training opportunities

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

The Partnership for Observation of the Global Oceans (POGO) is pleased to announce several training programmes for 2013. Please see below for details. If you have any questions, please e-mail pogoadmin@pml.ac.uk.

 

I would be grateful if you could circulate this announcement via your mailing lists and to anyone you think might be interested.

 

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

1.      POGO-SCOR Visiting Fellowship scheme

 

The scheme is designed to promote training and capacity building leading towards a global observation scheme for the oceans, and is aimed at scientists, technicians, graduate students (preferably PhD) and post-doctoral fellows involved in oceanographic work at centres in developing countries and countries with economies in transition (e.g. Commonwealth of Independent States, Eastern Europe).

 

Priority is given to applicants in early stages of career development. The fellowship offers the opportunity to visit other oceanographic centres for a short period (1 to 3 months) for training on any aspect of oceanographic observations, analyses, and interpretation. It provides financial support to cover the return airfare from the fellow's home country to the host institution, and a contribution towards accommodation and subsistence for the period of the visit.   

 

For more information go to: http://ocean-partners.org/training-and-education/pogo-scor-fellowship. The deadline for applications is 23 December 2012.

 

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

2.      POGO-PAP-GreenSeas fellowship for research cruise training

 

Based on the success of the POGO-AMT cruise fellowship programme, POGO has set up a new fellowship in partnership with the Porcupine Abyssal Plain (PAP) cruise programme and the EU project GreenSeas.

 

This fellowship programme is open to scientists, technicians, graduate students and post-doctoral fellows involved in oceanographic work at centres in developing countries and countries with economies in transition.

The selected candidate will have the opportunity to visit one of four participating institutes in the UK, Germany or Denmark, for one month prior to the start of the cruise to participate in cruise preparation and planning; to go on the cruise (29 May to 18 June 2013) and help make hydrological, biogeochemical and/or and ecological observations; and after the cruise to spend one additional month at the host institution, learning to analyse the results statistically and interpret them.

 

The fellowship provides a round-trip ticket to the host country and a stipend for living expenses for up to two months stay in the host country; travel and accommodation associated with joining and returning from the ship; ship messing fee; seafaring medical and sea survival course.

 

For more information go to: http://ocean-partners.org/training-and-education/research-cruise-training/pap-fellowships. The deadline for applications is 19 December 2012.

 

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

3.      POGO Visiting Professorship scheme

 

The Professorship allows short visits (2 weeks to 3 months) of distinguished scientists from advanced oceanographic institutes to institutes in developing countries and countries with economies in transition, to provide training and mentoring, to develop collaborations and enhance networking. The goal of the Visiting Professorship is capacity building in the host institution, leading to enhanced sustained ocean observations to address societal issues of the day. The programme generally funds one Professorship every year. 

 

The programme is open to oceanographic research establishments and educational institutes in developing countries and countries with economies in transition. The proposal must be submitted by a senior scientist from the institute wishing to host the visiting professor, and the application must be made after procuring in writing the willingness of the proposed professor to participate in the programme.

 

The programme will cover the international travel costs of the professor and a modest honorarium, as well as modest travel and accommodation costs for inviting students or young scientists from neighbouring areas to the host institution. It is preferred that the host institution cover all the local costs for the visiting professor, as a mark of their commitment to the programme.

 

For more information go to: http://ocean-partners.org/training-and-education/pogo-visiting-professorship. The deadline for applications is 23 December 2012.

 

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

 

Best regards,

 

Sophie

_________________________________________
Dr. Sophie Seeyave
Scientific Coordinator
Partnership for Observation of the Global Oceans (POGO)
Plymouth Marine Laboratory
Prospect Place
Plymouth PL1 3DH
United Kingdom

Tel. +44 (0)1752 633 424
Fax. +44 (0)1752 633 101
http://ocean-partners.org

 

 
Latest news: www.pml.ac.uk and @PlymouthMarine
 
Plymouth Marine Laboratory (PML) is a company limited by guarantee registered in England & Wales, company number 4178503. Registered Charity No. 1091222. Registered Office: Prospect Place, The Hoe, Plymouth  PL1 3DH, UK. 
 
This message is private and confidential. If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender and remove it from your system. You are reminded that e-mail communications are not secure and may contain viruses; PML accepts no liability for any loss or damage which may be caused by viruses.

--
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.



--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Fieldwork and Expedition Planning Weekend - Explore at the RGS 16th to 18th of November!

Dear UK Polar Network,

Just a gentle reminder that the Explore weekend at the Royal Geographic Society is only 5 DAYS AWAY! 

This Saturday and Sunday (with a Friday night lecture for those who can make it), the RGS (London) is hosting lectures, workshops and exhibits to help organise your own field research project or expedition in a variety of environments and disciplines. Over 90 leading field scientists and explorers provide inspiration, contacts and advice over the course of this unique weekend. It is the perfect place to start something new or gain advice on an existing project from the experts themselves through both group discussions or one to one chats.

The basis for Explore isn't about what you have done, it is about what you will do.

I will be there alongside Laura Hobbs flying the UKPN flag high and mighty, as will numerous other UKPN members, so book up and show your faces! The RGS has kindly offered a discount to our ever expanding network, so be sure to mention that you are one of us when booking the weekend to get a weekend pass for just £55 (you even get your own name badge when you get there, because we care). 

Details regarding going out for a UKPN meal/beer(s) to come shortly, at which of course every UKPN member is more than welcome, regardless of Explore attendance! So if you can get to London this weekend, or are based there already, make sure your crack up for this exciting opportunity.

Link is below for more info and hopefully we will see you there!


All the best,

Tom Perriment

UKPN E&O Coordinator

P.S. Don't forget the discount!

Fwd: [CRYOLIST] Fully-funded PhD Studentship at the British Antarctic Survey: Modelling the ocean contribution to climate change on the Antarctic Peninsula


Exciting PhD opportunity at BAS...


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Meredith, Michael P. <mmm@bas.ac.uk>
Date: 9 November 2012 14:09
Subject: [CRYOLIST] Fully-funded PhD Studentship at the British Antarctic Survey: Modelling the ocean contribution to climate change on the Antarctic Peninsula
To: "Meredith, Michael P." <mmm@bas.ac.uk>


Fully-funded PhD Studentship at the British Antarctic Survey: Modelling the ocean contribution to climate change on the Antarctic Peninsula

Supervisors: Paul Holland and Mike Meredith (BAS) and Jenny Pike (Cardiff University)

The Antarctic Peninsula region is changing rapidly, with dramatic sea ice loss and surface ocean warming of over 1°C in just a few decades. Glacial ice has retreated, accelerated, and thinned, contributing to sea-level rise. Southern Ocean warming is expected to continue, so it is crucial that we consider the ocean's role in these changes. We must understand the interactions between ocean, sea ice and glaciers, complex ice-ocean feedbacks, and the fate of the meltwater that results. These processes remain poorly represented in the latest generation of climate models.

This project will complement observations by creating a detailed computer model of ocean, sea ice and glacial ice to understand key processes in the region. The model will allow examination of critical processes: the effect of sea ice retreat on ocean mixing and atmospheric forcing; increased supply of warm water from the Southern Ocean; and the origin and fate of increased freshwater input.

The student will be responsible for creating the regional model, using the latest datasets of seabed topography, atmospheric forcing, and ocean currents. They will then incorporate the transport of oxygen isotopes into the model in order to track and 'fingerprint' the different sources of freshwater change in the region. This will lead to significant new insight into the climate processes operating in both modern and Holocene (past 10,000 yr) environments.

The studentship is based in the Polar Oceans programme at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, a group with world-leading expertise in observing and modelling the changing Antarctic oceans. The doctorate will be awarded by Cardiff University, with the co-supervisor in the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences providing expertise on climate changes of the Antarctic Peninsula over the Holocene.

Applicants should hold or expect to gain at least an upper-second class undergraduate degree in Physics, Mathematics, Oceanography, Meteorology, or any other numerate subject. The project will involve developing, running, and analysing a state-of-the-art ocean model on HECToR, the UK's national supercomputing facility. No Antarctic fieldwork is required, though opportunities to join a research cruise to the Southern Ocean may arise during the project.

The studentship will last 3.5 years from October 2013. The stipend for 2012/2013 was £13,590 p.a. Eligibility restrictions apply: http://www.nerc.ac.uk/funding/available/postgrad/eligibility.asp.

Informal enquiries directed to Paul Holland (p.holland@bas.ac.uk) are very welcome. To apply, please include a covering letter, CV and the e-mail addresses of two referees and send to basstudentoffice@bas.ac.uk, addressed to Paul Holland. Please quote reference BASDTG/holl/3.

The closing date for applications is 31st January 2013.--
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Thursday, November 8, 2012

Dundee Science Festival - next week!

Dear UKPN, 

On Monday and Tuesday next week (12th and 13th November), the UK Polar Network will be running two days of workshops at the Dundee Science Festival. We will be working with schools from across the region to bring Polar science to life. 

If you are based in Dundee (or are able to travel) and would like to help out during the event, be it for both days or a smaller period of time, then please do let me know.  This is a great opportunity to get involved with outreach, even if you have no previous experience!

Many Thanks, 

Laura Hobbs
Education and Outreach Coordinator, UK Polar Network

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Speakers needed for APECS Session on Ocean Acidification

Dear UKPN Members,

I am currently finalising a Virtual Poster Session on Polar Ocean Acidification through APECS (Association for Polar Early Career Scientists) which will occur towards the end of this month. We still need one or two speakers - if you would like the opportunity to present your research, then please get in touch as soon as possible (coleenclaire@yahoo.co.uk).

This is a great opportunity to expand your CV, build experience in presenting and widens your profile internationally. Otherwise please look out for the session if you fancy just listening and learning more about this exciting and rapidly expanding area of science.

To highlight your interest then please get in touch with Coleen Suckling over the next few days on coleenclaire@yahoo.co.uk.

The virtual poster session showcases your poster (which can be recycled from previous events) as a visual aid, and you will orally present the poster (approx. 10-15 minutes) to live listeners through the web (I'll go through how it all works prior to the event - it's very easy!) and answer any live streamed questions from listeners.

I hope to hear from you in the near future.

Best regards,

Coleen


Dr Coleen C. Suckling
Post-Doctorate Researcher

Please note that this email address may expire in the near future. I can be contacted through the websites below or on coleenclaire@yahoo.co.uk

British Antarctic Survey & the University of Cambridge, UK
www.coleensuckling.co.uk
www.polarnetwork.org
www.polarsymposium.com--
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.

Bangor Polar Symposium - Deadline coming up!

Dear UKPN Members,

The deadline is fast approaching for the upcoming Bangor Polar Symposium (see below) and we have had high interest. I recommend that you apply soon! We hope to see you at this event!


Bangor Polar Symposium
Saturday 8th December 2012
School of Ocean Sciences, Bangor University (North Wales)
­­­­____________________________________________________

Are you an early career scientist (undergraduate up to late Post-Doc) who is interested in or involved in polar science?

If yes then this could the event for you!

Bangor University's School of Ocean Sciences are hosting a one day informal 'Bangor Polar Symposium' which will allow early career scientists to network,
gain advice on polar careers and present their research to a friendly audience.

Organized by the UK Polar Network and Bangor University's Endeavor Society this day follows a conference style providing those early in their career the experience of a conference format.
For those selected to present their research, there will be a presentation and poster competition where winners will receive a small prize.

Keynote speakers, such as Dr Stephanie Wilson (Bangor University) and Mr Nick Hughes (Norwegian Sea Ice Service and Edinburgh University - Sea Ice) have been invited to present their work and
form part of a mentor panel to help answer any questions you might have regarding "How to get yourself into polar science and general research".
The mentor panel will be followed by a wine reception poster session and finally a buffet dinner in the local pub.

If you would like to attend this exciting event then please contact us indicating your interest by 10th November.
We do recommend that you do this earlier as interest is anticipated to be high.
We are asking for all participants to register with a £10 fee. This fee will secure your place and help cover costs for food and drinks (tea/coffees, lunch and dinner).

Those who would like to present their work (or only attend) are asked to submit<http://polarsymposium.com/contact/> a 250 word abstract before the 10th November, please note that presentation slots are limited.
We will ensure a rapid communication on the outcome so that you can make travel arrangements well in advance of the event.
All participants must also be members of the UKPN <https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=ukpn&A=1%29> (to join for free enter your name and address at the link below in order to kept up to date with polar news, science, funding, jobs and study opportunities).

We hope that you can join us for this exciting event!

For further information and to submit your application please refer to the following website:
www.polarsymposium.com<http://www.polarsymposium.com/>

--
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 2, 2012

Antarctic photo essay

Stumbled across this photo essay this week. Well worth enjoying over morning fika.

http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2012/10/scenes-from-antarctica/100384/

--   Michael Spencer  Scottish mountain snow PhD  School of GeoScience (Grant Institute)  University of Edinburgh  Web: http://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/homes/s1066252  Linkedin: http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/michael-spencer/29/305/5b6  Twitter: https://twitter.com/MikeRSpencer  Blog: http://scottishsnow.wordpress.com/ 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

PhD opportunity in Polar Meteorology

BAS anticipates a studentship in the following topic in 2013
(subject to funding)

Investigating the spatial distribution of Föhn conditions and their impact on surface melt over the Larsen Ice Shelf

Supervisors:
Dr Amélie Kirchgaessner (British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, CB3 0ET)
Dr. Andrew Ross (School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT)

1995 and 2002 saw the dramatic break-up and collapse of huge parts of the Larsen Ice Shelf, Antarctica. It is widely accepted that hydrofracturing (melt water enters crevasses and prevents their refreezing) is the mechanism behind the break-up of the Larsen A and Larsen B ice shelves. Adiabatic warming of the air on the lee side of mountains, so called Föhn winds, are thought to provide the atmospheric conditions for significant warming over the Larsen Ice Shelf thus leading to the initial firn densification and subsequently providing the melt water for hydrofracturing. Measurements have provided evidence that in some cases Föhn events reach an Automatic Weather Station (AWS) over 100km from the foot of the Antarctic Peninsula mountains.

This student project will use archived mesoscale model output from the Antarctic Mesoscale Prediction System AMPS to spatially analyse surface parameters during cases of Föhn events identified in AWS measurements during 2011. The student will perform high resolution model simulations with the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model to compare how the representation of these cases differs depending on model resolution. A combination of model data and AWS observations will be used to study the spatial and temporal distribution of Föhn events over the entire Larsen Ice Shelf, their impact on surface melt conditions, and their potential role in past and potential future ice shelf break ups in the area.

This NERC PhD Studentship is linked to the British Antarctic Survey Climate Programme. In the Climate programme we use climate and weather model simulations together with observations from both polar regions to improve our understanding of how natural and human-induced factors contribute to climate change. More information about the programme can be found at http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/bas_research/our_research/current/programmes/climate/index.php

The student will be based at BAS, supervised by Dr. Amélie Kirchgaessner and Dr. John King. The student will be registered in the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds with Dr. Andrew Ross as University supervisor. A close link to NCAS will be provided through Dr. Ralph Burton, who will act as co-supervisor in Leeds.

Applicants should hold or expect to gain a first or upper second-class degree in Meteorology/ Atmospheric Sciences/ Physics, or closely related relevant discipline. As the use of a sophisticated numerical model is an essential part of the project, candidates should be highly numerate and must be able to demonstrate evidence of good computing/IT skills. The studentship will provide excellent training in the analysis of large data sets and in numerical modelling. No fieldwork is planned for this project.

The studentship is expected to last 3.5 years from October 2013 subject to NERC funding. Stipend for 2012/2013 was £13,590 p.a. For eligibility criteria, please go to:
http://www.nerc.ac.uk/funding/available/postgrad/eligibility.asp

Requests for further information on this studentship should be addressed to Dr. Amélie Kirchgaessner (acrki@bas.ac.uk). Applications should include a cover letter, CV and the e-mail addresses of two referees, and should be sent to basstudentoffice@bas.ac.uk. Please quote reference number BASDTG/kirc/3

Closing date for applications is 31st January 2013.

For further details about the British Antarctic Survey please see: http://www.antarctica.ac.uk

***************************
Dr. Amélie Kirchgessner FRMetS
British Antarctic Survey
email: amelie.kirchgaessner@bas.ac.uk
+44 (0)1223 211359
***************************

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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.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

UKPN Autumn Newsletter (Events and updates)

Dear UKPN Members,

Please find attached the Autumn 2012 newsletter. This details of past and future events are listed. So of these may be of interest and use to you - but please bear in mind - some of the deadlines are fairly close now! We hope to see you at future events.
Thank you for your support and input towards YOUR early career network!

All the best,

Coleen



Coleen C. Suckling
UKPN Secretary
Post-Doctorate Researcher

Please note that this email address may expire in the near future. I can be contacted through the websites below or on coleenclaire@yahoo.co.uk

British Antarctic Survey & the University of Cambridge, UK
www.coleensuckling.co.uk
www.polarnetwork.org
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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.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Fwd: Arctic Finnmark Expedition Opportunities

UKPN members

There are exciting opportunities for Arctic leadership training with the British Exploring Society! See below and the attached documents for more information. 

Ella 


Hi there,

 

I am writing from the British Exploring Society with two opportunities that we hope will interest you, and would be most grateful if you passed this info around to anyone who might be interested among your networks. We are a youth development charity that organises challenging scientific expeditions to wilderness environments around the world.

 

In July-August 2013, we are running an expedition to Finnmark in Northern Norway for 16-25 year-olds, which we hope will interest you specifically. The expedition is split into different groups to suit different age brackets and levels of experience – please see below:

 

18-25 year-olds

Trainee Leader Programme

 

16-20 year-olds

Arctic Finnmark Expedition

 

Please see the images below for more info and click on the links for further info from our website. I would be most grateful if you could let me know if/how you have passed on this message. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to ask.

 

Best wishes,


Gina

 

 

Gina Seilern

Marketing Manager

British Exploring Society

at the Royal Geographical Society building

1 Kensington Gore

London

SW7 2AR

 

020 7591 3141| gina@britishexploring.org | www.britishexploring.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

P Before you print think about the ENVIRONMENT

 




--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network

Monday, October 29, 2012

3 yr Post Doc Research Fellow in Sheffield

Permafrost Post Doc in Sheffield:

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tetzlaff, Doerthe <d.tetzlaff@abdn.ac.uk>
Date: 26 October 2012 14:15
Subject: [CRYOLIST] 3 yr PDRF in Sheffield
To: "cryolist@lists.cryolist.org" <cryolist@lists.cryolist.org>


The University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
Job Reference Number: UOS005461
Job Title: Post-doctoral Research Fellow
Contract Type: Fixed term for 3 years
Department: Department of Geography
Salary: £28,401 - £ 31,020
Closing Date: 12th November 2012

Summary:
Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Fellow to
participate in a UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)-funded
project entitled "Permafrost catchments in transition: hydrological
controls on carbon cycling and greenhouse gas budgets". The principal
objective of this post is to quantify and understand the biotic/abiotic
controls on carbon fluxes in permafrost environments, with particular
emphasis on the interface between the water and carbon cycles, and on
the implications for global radiative-forcing. You will become part of a
world-class UK and international research team, but have specific
responsibility for aspects of the work-programme dealing with plant-soil
interactions, and with surface-atmosphere exchanges of carbon dioxide
and methane. Overall, the team will measure the capture of carbon from
the atmosphere, its distribution in plants and soils, and the
biological, physical and chemical controls of carbon transport and
delivery from soils to freshwaters, and ultimately to the atmosphere as
carbon dioxide and methane.

You should have a PhD in ecology or biogeochemistry, or another relevant
area of environmental /ecological science, and have experience of
designing, developing and publishing research. This is an opportunity
for an outstanding researcher to join a vibrant and successful unit in
one of the UK's leading research-intensive universities. The opportunity
offers significant potential for professional growth and exposure in
Europe and North America.

This post is fixed-term with a start date of 1 January 2013 and an end
date of 31 December 2015.

Supporting documentation and information on how to apply can be found at
http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/jobs. For informal enquiries about this job
and department contact Professor Philip Wookey on
p.wookey@sheffield.ac.uk or +44 (0)114 222 7978.
 

Doerthe Tetzlaff, PhD, MSc

Professor in Hydrology and Landscape Ecology

Director of the Northern Rivers Institute (http://www.abdn.ac.uk/nri)

weblink: http://www.abdn.ac.uk/geography/profiles/d.tetzlaff/

School of Geosciences

University of Aberdeen

Aberdeen Scotland, UK AB24 3UF

phone: +(0)1224 273702

 

Associate Editor Hydrological Processes

 



The University of Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No SC013683.

--
Ella Darlington
President, UK Polar Network