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Monthly Archives: January 2014

Carrying a pair of giant pink lungs in front of the Polish Ministry of...
Culture, People

Cough for Coal at COP19

Author Gabriele Messori Date January 30, 2014
Isobel Braithwaite and Gabriele Messori
Tagged Climate change, COP19, Health, UNFCCC, Warsaw | 1 Comment |
Quite often people ask me about my field of study in parties or activity...
Land, Sea, Systems

Hydrology and hydrological model

Author Lu Li Date January 29, 2014
Lu Li
Tagged climatesnack, Flood, Global warming, hydrologic cycle, hydrological model, hydrology, Modelling, Precipitation, Water cycle, watershed | 1 Comment |
Expert

Getting to the “So What?” of Your Science

Author SciSnack Date January 27, 2014
SciSnack
Leave a comment |
The dark days of winter may have you longing for warmer and sunnier times....
Air, Land, Sea

Excitement at the front: one island, two sea breezes

Author Karin van der Wiel Date January 24, 2014
Karin van der Wiel
Tagged convection, gfd, sea breeze, Weather | 1 Comment |
Many PhD researchers use climate models with little thought of how they were developed....
Air, People, Systems

A History of Climate Models

Author Amee O'Callaghan Date January 22, 2014
Amee O'Callaghan
Tagged Climate, Climate Models, computers, forecasting, history, Modelling, numerical method, numerical scheme, Weather, weather prediction | 5 Comments |
Expert

Consider the Introduction

Author SciSnack Date January 20, 2014
SciSnack
Tagged introduction, planning, process, scicomm, writing | Leave a comment |
Most PhD students try to perfect a way of describing their research in a...
Air, Life

Saharan dust: the Amazon’s fertiliser

Author Siân Williams Date January 2, 2014
Siân Williams
Tagged Amazon, Amazon Basin, Amazon rainforest, Atlantic, Cayenne, Dust, Nutrient, Sahara, South America | Leave a comment |
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Latest Posts
  • The ultimate jigsaw puzzle: Cracking Arctic sea ice
  • Stable water isotopes: a powerful - but often overlooked - tool in the meteorological toolbox
  • Why 4,000 year old butter is actually really cool
  • How (not) to lie with colors
  • Eat out to help out or eat in to stay alive: how have modern and historical pandemics changed our eating habits?
  • Death, chaos and geese in ancient Egypt
  • Walk Like An Egyptian, Drink Like A Viking
  • Bad Archaeology: Corsets? Of courset!
  • Google Images can be a treacherous friend
  • Bad Archaeology: Woman the Gatherer or Woman the Shoplifter?
Recent Comments
  • Barry Marks: Earlier weather apps mostly relied on meteorological data for weather prediction
  • Thomas Spengler: Very well written, Andrew, and a very important topic! Thanks for raising this a
  • Dorcas Kalele: Conservation agriculture, a gateway to food security in Africa
  • Dorcas Kalele: Good for read and practice
  • Alex: Unfortunately, I I've found this article only now, and I see no one has yet comm
  • Alex: The main greenhouse gases are CO2, CH4 and N2O. Only the first one can effect on
  • Stephen Kabati: quite educative.i would want to contact this writer
  • Mirjam Glessmer: Feel free to make use of this if it is helpful: http://mirjamglessmer.com/2015/0
  • Lucas: This is quite a nice approach to gain information about climate and culture year
  • Sead Ahmed: Dear Canute Hyandye, I have seen that you have made correction to the CFSR data
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