Angie Pendergrass: The uneven nature of precipitation and its changes
Skeats Lab Room 209, McCoy Building, Parkville, Victoria, AustraliaAngie Pendergrass (NCAR). The uneven nature of precipitation and its changes.
Angie Pendergrass (NCAR). The uneven nature of precipitation and its changes.
The moored current meter observations in the Maluku Channel of the Indonesian seas suggest that upwelling equatorial Kelvin waves in the spring-summer of 2014 are forced by a significant increase... View Article
Graeme MacGilchrist (University of Princeton). Reframing the carbon cycle of the subpolar Southern Ocean. Global climate is critically sensitive to physical and biogeochemical dynamics in the subpolar Southern Ocean, since... View Article
Caroline Ummenhofer (Wood Hole Oceanographic Institute). Changes in the width of the Indo-Pacific tropical rain belt from climate model simulations and palaeo proxy records. The Indo-Pacific tropical rain belt (TRB) marks... View Article
Prof. Primeau will present an inverse model to constrain the residual mean circulation of the ocean and to estimate rates of marine nitrogen fixation. The results demonstrate strong spatial variability in the nitrogen to phosphorus ratio of exported organic matter that greatly increases the global nitrogen-fixation rate.
Kazuuhiro Yoshida (University of Hokaido). Ice algae and primary production. 1pm, Tuesday, February 19. Aurora Theatre, IMAS.
Chris Rudiger (Monash University). About Earth observation data in operational use – background (errors) and uses. 10am, Wednesday, February 20. Level 9 Seminar Room, 700 Collins St, Melbourne.
Lincoln Alves (CCST / INPE Brazil). Understanding the triggering factor of climate vulnerability: climate change impacts in Brazil. 1pm, Thursday, February 21. Level 9 Seminar Room, 700 Collins St, Melbourne.
Description Australia’s international climate targets create frequent misunderstandings, even among experts. Seemingly straightforward, the reality is that the targets are not as intuitive as they appear, with much of the... View Article
Marchus Jochum (University of Copenhagen). The future of ocean modelling. We can only trust current Earth System Models with future projections if they are able to reproduce past events. I... View Article