On Nov. 6, พรพรสำฦตโs second mapathon produced maps for areas where a lack of pre-existing data makes it difficult for first responders to provide relief during humanitarian crises.
The National Geographic Societyโs Committee for Research and Exploration has awarded Assistant Professor of Geography Mike Loranty a grant for his project โDisentangling Tree and Shrub Phenology in Siberian Taiga Ecosystems.โ The funding will cover Lorantyโs travel to the Northeast Scientific Station in Chersky, Russia, where he will monitor the timing โ or phenology โ [โฆ]
พรพรสำฦตโs Picker Interdisciplinary Science Institute continues its mission of supporting innovative research with four new grants for 2016. The special funding is designed to help bring together พรพรสำฦต faculty with outside researchers from around the world in an effort to open new areas of study, and to find creative ways to tackle existing problems.
Together they will travel more than 500 miles, through forests, mountains, and desolate tundra. The entire forest, growing in a shallow layer of soil, sits on ice and frozen dirt that is tens of thousands of years old.
พรพรสำฦต assistant professor of geography Michael Loranty was involved in new research that predicts rising temperatures will lead to a massive โgreening,โ or increase in plant cover, in the Arctic. In the paper published March 31 in Nature Climate Change, scientists reveal new models projecting that wooded areas in the Arctic could increase by as [โฆ]