• TCDC Commons• Grand Opening at IDEO Q Chula-Samyan #TCDC #anandadevelopment #ldeo #Bangkok (at Ideo Q Chula-Samyan)
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• TCDC Commons• Grand Opening at IDEO Q Chula-Samyan #TCDC #anandadevelopment #ldeo #Bangkok (at Ideo Q Chula-Samyan)
Lama x masuk kilang last masuk on Jun 2015... Lupus file.. #Shred #burned #LDEO (at Bandar Sri Perdana)
More photographs from the 1960's when the crew of the R/V Vema attempted to salvage a bent coring pipe.
Climate scientists took a break from their research to be fashion models, and you can hang the results can on your wall come 2014.
Thanks to Climate Central for this fantastic story. We gave them an exclusive look inside the calendar, so click on the link if you want to see the pages for scientist Lisa Goddard (aka Dr. July).
Hang with models in New York City on November 12th!
Looking for something to do in New York City tomorrow night? Make your way down to the Rauschenberg Project Space on West 19th at 7:00 p.m. and mingle with our climate models/scientists, journalist Flora Lichtman, photographer Jordan Matter and many more.
Flora will moderate a panel discussion with five of our climate models, then we'll break for informal chatting and wine. The conversation will focus on creative ways to make the study of our climate and adaptation to it more accessible and understandable.
The event is free and open to the public. No RSVP required. Visit Marfa Dialogues/NY for more information.
P.S. Check out ArtLab's super cool post on the calendar and our event.
These climate scientists had some fun posing in landscapes representing their very serious work.
The Climate Models calendar is HOT. Today it's featured in the Smithsonian Magazine!
SCIENTISTS 1: PIRATES 0
In April-May, 2001, just months before 9/11, a team of scientists led by Gerald Ganssen and I sailed aboard the Dutch-flagged R/V Pelagia from Dar es Salaam, Tanzania to Port Said, Egypt on the penultimate leg of a scientific circumnavigation of the African continent. This cruise sailed along the pirate-infested waters of the Somali coasts and the Gulf of Aden. With the vigilance of our captain and crew we safely navigated these waters and collected some new, extremely valuable, sediment cores and surface plankton tow and water samples from this geopolitically challenging region.
core locations
Pirate probability density function
One of these cores, P178-15P, was taken from a perched basin in the Tadjoura Trench from a site cored long ago (in 1947!) by the Swedish ship Albatross. Finding this site was a challenge as the position was only approximate (pre-GPS!), so we used the PDR depth finder to zero in on the known 869m depth location.
Jess Tierney came to Lamont in 2011 as a NOAA post-doc to work up the plant-wax biomolecular record for this core, specifically extracting the plant waxes from these sediments as fatty acid methyl esters; FAMEs) and analyzing their hydrogen isotopic composition by GC-IRMS in our new stable isotope mass spectrometry facility. The leaf wax D/H composition (δDwax) is a powerful proxy for regional aridity, as the plants record precipitation/evaporation balance and changes in regional convection.
The results were surprising in many ways. The amplitude of the D/H excursions over this 40 ka long record was remarkably large, reaching nearly 40-50 per mil. Also, because the sedimentation rate for this core was so high (32 cm/ka), it offers a high-fidelity and continuous record of the hydroclimate shifts in the region. To our surprise, the onset and termination of the African Humid Period (roughly 12-5 ka BP) were really abrupt, with each transition completed within a couple of centuries. It’s sobering to think that climate changes this large can occur so swiftly. As discussed in the Tierney and deMenocal (2013) Science paper, a similar history is found in sediment cores from East African Lakes, Turkana, Challa, and Tanganyika.
Tierney, J.E., deMenocal, P.B., Abrupt shifts in Horn of Africa hydroclimate since the Last Glacial Maximum. Science (2013). Tierney.deMenocal.2013.pdf
Source: http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/~peter/site/Research/Research.html