From cecilia at misu.su.se Tue May 2 09:41:20 2017 From: cecilia at misu.su.se (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Cecilia_Wessl=E9n?=) Date: Tue, 2 May 2017 07:41:20 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Reminder - 3 seminars today! Message-ID: <27be1d9643c84ab1b19a5c5c3018fab7@ebox-prod-srv09.win.su.se> Reminder: 3 seminars today - May 2 MISU Seminar Series - Climate in Society Name Andrea Downing Stockholm Resilience Centre (SRS), Stockholm University Title Resilience for Development Time and place Tuesday 2 May 2017, 11.15 Rossbysalen (Room C609), Arrhenius Laboratory, 6th floor Welcome! Who is afraid of the big bad press? Why do researchers say no to reporters when they ask for an interview? And do women say no more often than men? This lecture by Press Officer Elsa Adrielsson Helin aims to give you some insight in what reporters are looking for, and how to feel comfortable and more secure when being interviewed in media about your research. You are all very welcome to attend! Time and place: 2:nd of May, 15.00 - 15.30, Vivi Täckholmsalen (The NPQ house) www.su.se/deep/english Välkomna på is-träff med Naturgeografi, Meteorologi och Kulturgeografi! Program: 17.30-18.00 Drop in på plan 3 i U-huset, Geovetenskapens hus, Svante Arrhenius väg 12, Stockholms universitet. Vi bjuder på smörgås med dryck. 18.00-19.00 Högbomsalen: Mårten berättar om arbetet med boken "Skrinnarens guide till Mälaren : isläggningsskeden, svaga områden och turförslag på Mälaren och Hjälmaren" och Oskar beskriver hur Skridskokarta Mälaren 1:50.000 växte fram. 19.00-20.00 Polarforskare deltar och ger sin bild av aktuell forskning om is och klimat sedan fortsatt diskussion och mingel på plan 3 i Geovetenskapens hus. [cid:image003.jpg at 01D2C328.40119D10] ------------------------------------------- See all seminars: misu.su.se Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: MISU on YouTube Follow MISU on Facebook and Twitter -------------- next part -------------- En HTML-bilaga skiljdes ut... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 34690 bytes Desc: image003.jpg URL: From Matthew.Salter at aces.su.se Thu May 4 09:39:46 2017 From: Matthew.Salter at aces.su.se (Matthew Salter) Date: Thu, 4 May 2017 07:39:46 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] FW: RA2 workshop update Message-ID: <541bc69dfe2e4c8f8c37a007d0c6b205@ITMS04.ad.itm.su.se> Hi all, This is a final reminder of the RA2 workshop that will be held on Monday 8th May (details below and attached). Thanks to those of you who have already sent your speed talk slides to me. Those of you who have not, please send them to me by the end of tomorrow. If you have not registered but are now interested attending please feel free to do so but be aware that lunch/dinner will only be available to those who preregistered. Many thanks, Matt, Frida and Lars From: Matthew Salter Sent: 25 April 2017 16:59 To: 'bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se' Subject: RA2 workshop update Dear all, This is an update on our one-day Bolin Centre Research Area 2 workshop to be held on Monday the 8th of May, 2017 in Högbomssalen, Geohuset, Stockholm University. Attached you will find a schedule of the workshop but we outline the most important take home messages here: Speed talks It is our intention that each attendee will have five minutes to present 1-3 slides. We do not want to restrict the topic of these talks but they should, of course, relate to something within the research area (i.e. clouds, aerosols, turbulence and climate). As such, we welcome attendees to introduce themselves, an aspect of their research, something they have noted that may be of interest to the research area, or something completely different. Please send your slides to matthew.salter at aces.su.se by 1700 on Friday May 5th (pdf preferred but we can also take mac and windows ppt). The speakers should note that, as conveners, we will be strict on keeping each speaker to five minutes. Time permitting we will allow one question to each speaker from the floor while speakers are changing. Deeper discussion will be reserved for the breaks and dinner. Lunch Lunch and coffee will be provided outside Högbomsalen. Dinner Dinner will take place at the Faculty club, Stockholm University and is strictly reserved to those who preregistered. If you have any questions please don't hesitate to contact us. Many thanks, Matt, Frida and Lars -- ---- Matt Salter Research scientist Tel.: +46 (0)8 674 7222 Email: matthew.salter at aces.su.se Department of Environmental Science and Analytical Chemistry (ACES) Svante Arrhenius väg 8 11418 Stockholm Sweden Organisation no: SE202100306201 - ---------------------- Package delivery address: Stockholm University ACES Attn: Matt Salter Frescativägen 8 11418 Stockholm Sweden - ---------------------- Billing address: Stockholms Universitet Postbox 50741 20270 Malmö Order reference: REF 485 M. Salter -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Bolin Centre Workshop schedule.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 232448 bytes Desc: Bolin Centre Workshop schedule.pdf URL: From Christian.Beer at aces.su.se Fri May 5 10:01:23 2017 From: Christian.Beer at aces.su.se (Christian Beer) Date: Fri, 5 May 2017 08:01:23 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Biogeochemistry Seminar on Mossens and Lichens Message-ID: <19bb20cde32e4396af507e5293d88cea@ITMS04.ad.itm.su.se> [cid:image003.png at 01D2C586.8C46DEB0] Dear Bolin Centre for Climate Research We will have our next seminar in the series "Biogeochemical Cycles and Climate" (research area 4) next Tuesday. When? 9 May 2017, 13:00-14:00 Where? Geo-Building, U37 Speaker: Philipp Porada Title: Global effects of non-vascular vegetation on biogeochemical cycles and climate We hope to see many of you there. Kind regards Christian and Volker Abstract: Recently, non-vascular vegetation, such as lichens and mosses, have been shown to influence biogeochemical cycles in various ways. Here, we use process-based modelling approaches to quantify several of these effects at the global scale: (1) We show that mosses and lichens covering the forest floor at high latitudes exert a significant cooling effect on the soil, with implications for the permafrost carbon feedback, (2) we estimate the contribution of lichens and mosses to global emissions of nitrogen trace gases, which enhance the greenhouse effect, and (3) we quantify the contribution of non-vascular vegetation to global chemical weathering rates, which control climate at long time scales. Related papers: Estimating global nitrous oxide emissions by lichens and bryophytes with a process-based productivity model Porada, P.; Pöschl, U.; Kleidon, A.; Beer, C.; Weber, B. 2017 | Biogeosciences | 14 (1593-1602) Effects of bryophyte and lichen cover on permafrost soil temperature at large scale Porada, P.; Ekici, A.; Beer, C. 2016 | The Cryosphere | 10 (2291-2315) Earliest land plants created modern levels of atmospheric oxygen T. M. Lenton; T. W. Dahl; S. J. Daines; B. J. W. Mills; K. Ozaki; M. R. Saltzman; P. Porada 2016 | Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. | 113 (35) (9704-9709) High potential for weathering and climate effects of non-vascular vegetation in the Late Ordovician Porada, P.; Lenton, T. M.; Pohl, A.; Weber, B.; Mander, L.; Donnadieu, Y.; Beer, C.; Pöschl, U.; Kleidon, A. 2016 | Nat. Commun. | 7:12113 Christian Beer Department of Environmental Science and Analytical Chemistry (ACES) Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University Sweden Phone: 004686747387 email: christian.beer at aces.su.se webpage: www.christianbeer.net -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.png Type: image/png Size: 39272 bytes Desc: image003.png URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Fri May 5 12:04:37 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Fri, 5 May 2017 12:04:37 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Bolin Centre Seminar Series: (22 May) Do we need to account for ecology to model climate change? Message-ID: <29139A96-1087-491B-ACA5-D7C32FF586A9@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, Welcome to the fifth seminar in the Bolin Centre Seminar Series! The host this time is Research Area 5 = Historical to millennial climate variability The seminars are intended to present Bolin Centre research area science on a level understandable for scientist who are not specialists in the field. The lectures will be streamed and saved on the Bolin Centre website. Title: Do we need to account for ecology to model climate change? Speaker: Prof. Ben Smith Lund University, Sweden Date: Monday 22 May, 2017, 13:00–14:00 Place: Alhmannsalen, Geoscience Building Summary: Terrestrial ecosystems are part of the climate system. Climate-induced changes in vegetation composition, structure, distribution and greenhouse gas exchange feed back to the atmosphere from local to global scales. Current regional and global climate models account for instantaneous biophysical responses of land surface energy and water vapour exchange with the atmosphere. Emerging Earth system models also represent longer-term responses mediated by physiological processes and ecological interactions, but issues remain. Illustrating with simulation results from offline and coupled biosphere-atmosphere simulations with LPJ-GUESS, a second-generation global vegetation-biogeochemistry model, I highlight examples of how ecology - i.e. responses of organisms to a changing physical and biotic environment - influence forcing factors of relevance to climate dynamics globally and within the contrasting bioclimatic contexts of the Arctic and tropics. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: BolinCentre_SeminarSeries2017_RA5.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1108540 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Fri May 5 12:28:09 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Fri, 5 May 2017 12:28:09 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre: Call for items to the Newsletter 2017/3. Deadline 19 May Message-ID: <86CA3D78-BF3B-4863-907E-2CE5EE4F41F7@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, Please tell us your news! The Bolin Centre newsletter will be issued after each Science Advisory Group Meeting, i.e. around three times per semester. We publicise on the web continually. We ask all scientists (especially RA-leaders) for news about Publications Funding Outreach Visits Conferences & workshops Anything else you think we should know about Please contribute your news (text and eventual pictures) by email to bolin at su.se before 2017-05-19 Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Fri May 5 14:34:01 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Fri, 5 May 2017 14:34:01 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] =?utf-8?q?Bolin_Centre=C2=A0=5Breminder?= =?utf-8?q?=5D=3A_Flags_to_the_teasing_stick_pole?= Message-ID: <1CBD7B7D-AF2B-4CD7-82A6-B9A72227622B@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [Reminder] We have made a pole for flags with “buttonholes” so people without buttonholes can enjoy the irritating Bolin Centre teasing stick. To make it even more interesting, we would like to show the diversity of the Bolin Centre by designing the fabric as flags from countries in which Bolin Centre Scientists originate. If you lack your country of origin in the list below and you would like your flag to appear on the Bolin Centre teasing stick pole, then please email me We have already made flags for these countries (sorry for the Swedish) Bretagne Colombia Finland Frankrike Island Italien Kanada Nederländerna Norge Portugal Schweiz Serbien Skottland Skåne Sverige Sydafrika Tjeckien Tyskland Österrike Please note that we will not register this in any form Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From gabrielle.stockmann at geo.su.se Mon May 8 13:53:23 2017 From: gabrielle.stockmann at geo.su.se (Gabrielle Stockmann) Date: Mon, 8 May 2017 13:53:23 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: Postdoc opportunity in Hydrogeology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden References: <9c30723e-b3f5-21ce-c294-27b053e4a567@gvc.gu.se> Message-ID: <6B88D608-6D6A-4FE6-9407-1D4B4F3E7E72@geo.su.se> Dear Bolin Centre members, I just want to draw your attention to this post doc opportunity at the University of Gothenburg if you know of suitable candidates. Any candidate working with hydrology, climate, urban landscape, GIS etc. is of interest - deadline May 16. Best regards, Gabrielle Gabrielle Jarvik Stockmann Ph.D., Researcher in Geochemistry Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University Svante Arrhenius väg 8, room R423 SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Work: +46 (0)8 674 78 24 Cell phone: +46 (0)725 07 3108 E-mail: gabrielle.stockmann at geo.su.se > Vidarebefordrat brev: > > Från: Roland Barthel > Ämne: Postdoc opportunity in Hydrogeology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden > Datum: 3 maj 2017 15:09:59 CEST > Till: undisclosed-recipients:; > > Dear College, > > For further information on this position, and to apply, please follow this link: > > http://www.gu.se/english/about_the_university/job-opportunities/vacancies-details/?id=458 > > It would be great if you could share this link with potentially interested and eligible candidates (Ph.D. within last 3-4 years) . > > Best regards, > > Roland Barthel > > -- > ------------------------------------------------------ > Roland Barthel > Professor - Geology (Hydrogeology) > University of Gothenburg > Department of Earth Sciences > Box 460, SE-405 30 Göteborg > Visiting address: Guldhedsgatan 5A > Room 4.110 > Telephone: +46-31-786-1953 > Fax: +46-31-786-1986 > ----------------------------------------------------- > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Christian.Beer at aces.su.se Tue May 9 10:35:33 2017 From: Christian.Beer at aces.su.se (Christian Beer) Date: Tue, 9 May 2017 08:35:33 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Biogeochemistry Seminar on Mossens and Lichens Message-ID: <13e65e0dee7349ce957729a58e46b3cf@ITMS04.ad.itm.su.se> Dear All This is a reminder of today's Bolin Centre RA4 seminar, 13:00 in U37 All welcome! Christian From: Christian Beer Sent: Friday, May 5, 2017 10:01 AM To: Bolin Centre for Climate Research Cc: AcesB ; 'Volker bruechert' ; Christoph Humborg Subject: Biogeochemistry Seminar on Mossens and Lichens [cid:image001.png at 01D2C8AF.FC025910] Dear Bolin Centre for Climate Research We will have our next seminar in the series "Biogeochemical Cycles and Climate" (research area 4) next Tuesday. When? 9 May 2017, 13:00-14:00 Where? Geo-Building, U37 Speaker: Philipp Porada Title: Global effects of non-vascular vegetation on biogeochemical cycles and climate We hope to see many of you there. Kind regards Christian and Volker Abstract: Recently, non-vascular vegetation, such as lichens and mosses, have been shown to influence biogeochemical cycles in various ways. Here, we use process-based modelling approaches to quantify several of these effects at the global scale: (1) We show that mosses and lichens covering the forest floor at high latitudes exert a significant cooling effect on the soil, with implications for the permafrost carbon feedback, (2) we estimate the contribution of lichens and mosses to global emissions of nitrogen trace gases, which enhance the greenhouse effect, and (3) we quantify the contribution of non-vascular vegetation to global chemical weathering rates, which control climate at long time scales. Related papers: Estimating global nitrous oxide emissions by lichens and bryophytes with a process-based productivity model Porada, P.; Pöschl, U.; Kleidon, A.; Beer, C.; Weber, B. 2017 | Biogeosciences | 14 (1593-1602) Effects of bryophyte and lichen cover on permafrost soil temperature at large scale Porada, P.; Ekici, A.; Beer, C. 2016 | The Cryosphere | 10 (2291-2315) Earliest land plants created modern levels of atmospheric oxygen T. M. Lenton; T. W. Dahl; S. J. Daines; B. J. W. Mills; K. Ozaki; M. R. Saltzman; P. Porada 2016 | Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. | 113 (35) (9704-9709) High potential for weathering and climate effects of non-vascular vegetation in the Late Ordovician Porada, P.; Lenton, T. M.; Pohl, A.; Weber, B.; Mander, L.; Donnadieu, Y.; Beer, C.; Pöschl, U.; Kleidon, A. 2016 | Nat. Commun. | 7:12113 Christian Beer Department of Environmental Science and Analytical Chemistry (ACES) Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University Sweden Phone: 004686747387 email: christian.beer at aces.su.se webpage: www.christianbeer.net -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 39519 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Tue May 9 12:20:47 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Tue, 9 May 2017 12:20:47 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre: Welcome to visit the Climate Festival! Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, Welcome to visit the Bolin Centre Climate Festival! The Bolin Centre Climate Festival is scheduled for Monday to Wednesday next week (15-17 May), and you are most welcome to come and enjoy it! The festival is intended to disseminate knowledge about climate change in a fun way and to address a widespread climate related anxiety. Most of the participants are youngsters 10-19 years old from schools in the vicinity of Stockholm, but we also warmly welcome the general public, university students and scientists. We have over 1200 participants registered up until now, but some slots are still open. More information and the full program http://www.bolin.su.se/index.php/bolin-days-for-youngsters/543-bolincentrets-klimatfestival Please register We need to know if you want to come! https://www.eventbrite.com/e/klimatfestivalen-registrering-32689454037 Please note that the language during the Bolin Centre Climate Festival is mostly Swedish The Bolin Centre Climate Festival is arranged by the Bolin Centre for Climate Research together with The House of Science (Vetenskapens Hus). Highlights you might be interested in Challenges in communicating science: Lessons from Arctic research Wednesday 17 May, 18:00–19:30 Nordenskiöld room, Geoscience Building, Stockholm University How can something as remote as the Arctic play a globally important role? How can scientist share their knowledge of climate in an accessible way? Panel discussion: Thomas Cronin (US Geological Survey), Bert Bolin Climate Lecturer 2017 Susanna Baltscheffsky (SR Klotet) Andres Jato (Arctic Council) John Gustavsson (Väsby Gymnasium) Nina Kirchner (Bolin Centre for Climate Research) Activity area Monday 15, Tuesday 16 and Wednesday 17 May, 8:30–19:30 Nordenskiöld foyer, Geoscience Building, Stockholm University A lot of organisations have hands-on exhibits. Come and explore! Seminars Nordenskiöld room, Geoscience Building, Stockholm University Monday 15 May, 10:00–11:00 Där inlandsisen möter havet | Nina Kirchner, Bolin Centre Föreläsningen tar dig med till polarområdena, där den grönländska och antarktiska inlandsisen finns, granne med ishaven. Parisavtalets mål är att uppvärmningen av atmosfären ska hållas under 2 grader, men haven blir också varmare. Påverkar detta inlandsisarna? Hur och varför? Och vilka konsekvenser kan det ge? Monday 15 May, 11:00–12:00 Vårtecken blir medborgarforskning: Fåglar, blommor och bin | Cecilia Kullberg & Kjell Bolmgren, Bolin Centre Den tydligaste effekten av den globala uppvärmningen är att växtsäsongen förändras. Vitsipporna blommar tidigare och flyttfåglarnas kalender förskjuts. Människor har i alla tider följt naturens kalender, vi berättar hur vi tillsammans kan hålla koll och beskriva de förändringar som sker. Monday 15 May, 13:00–14:00 Extrema väder | Zahra Kalantari, Bolin Centre Under de senaste decennierna har en ökad frekvens av extrema väderhändelser som kraftiga stormar och översvämningar rapporterats i olika delar av världen, till exempel norra Europa. Extrema nederbördshändelser kommer mycket sannolikt att blir mer intensiva och mer frekventa i slutet av detta århundrade, eftersom den globala medeltemperaturen vid jordytan ökar. Klimatförändringarna kan leda till att infrastrukturen belastas av en ökad frekvens av extrema nederbördshändelser, översvämningar och snösmältningsperioder. Enligt Klimat- och sårbarhetsutredningen kommer Sverige att påverkas kraftigt av förändringarna. Monday 15 May, 18:00–19:00 Jordens klimat genom geologisk historia | Alasdair Skelton, Bolin Centre En föreläsning om de naturliga krafterna bakom klimatförändringar. Lär dig om dinosauriernas växthus och ett världsomfattande ishus – Snowball Earth. Monday 15 May, 19:30–20:30 Den pågående klimatförändringen | Nina Kirchner, Bolin Centre Tuesday 16 May, 10:00–11:00 Effekter på biodiversitet när klimatet förändras | Sara Cousins, Bolin Centre Vad händer med biodiversiteten när klimatet förändras? Tuesday 16 May, 11:00–12:00 Snowball Earth – om en extrem klimathändelse | Alasdair Skelton, Bolin Centre Spår i gamla stenar berättar att jorden kan ha varit helt istäckt för 700 miljoner år sedan. Vad blev fel med jordens temperaturregleringen? Kan det hända igen? Tuesday 16 May, 13:00–14:00 Marine research using seals | Fabien Roquet, Bolin Centre Some marine mammals travel thousands of kilometers to find their food, continuously diving to great depths. By attaching miniaturized loggers on their fur, it has become possible to track them and monitor their behavior at sea. But we also obtained an unexpected treasure made of unique data on the ocean itself, in areas that are traditionally hard to reach. Tuesday 16 May, 14:00–15:00 Framtidens klimat berör oss idag | Gunn Persson, SMHI Hur kan vi titta på klimatet i framtiden och varför det är det viktigt? Vad är klimatscenarier och vad kan de berätta? Föreläsningen tar också upp behovet av att minska utsläppen och att anpassa samhället till förväntade förändringar. Tuesday 16 May, 18:00–19:00 Europas försurningsproblem på god väg att lösas! | Henning Rodhe, Bolin Centre Upptäckten av döda fiskar i Skandinaviska sjöar blev en väckarklocka för miljödebatten i slutet av 1960-talet. Ingen förstod i början vad fiskdöden berodde på. Men efter några års forskning kunde man visa att boven i dramat var de stora utsläppen av försurande svavel- och kväveföreningar från industrier framför allt i England och på den Europeiska kontinenten. Mycket tack vara ett bra samarbete mellan forskare och beslutsfattare har utsläppen idag kunnat minska med mer än 80 %. Försurningsproblemet är ett bra exempel på att även storskaliga miljöproblem kan lösas om bara kunskapen finns. Tuesday 16 May, 19:30–20:30 Koldioxidlagring i berggrunden | Gabrielle Stockmann, Bolin Centre Ett sätt att minska industrins utsläpp av koldioxid till atmosfären är att lagra utsläppen i geologiska reservoarer i undergrunden. Vilka metoder finns och hur säkra är de? Vad gör man idag och vilka framtidsplaner finns för CO2 lagring i berggrunden? Wednesday 17 May, 10:00–11:00 Permafrosten tinar! Vad händer när marken inte längre är frusen? | Ylva Sjöberg, Bolin Centre I Arktis finns mycket stora landområden där marken sedan länge är frusen året om. När klimatet blir varmare börjar marken sakta att tina, is blir till vatten, och liksom för en nytinad kyckling påbörjas nedbrytningsprocesser i växt- och djurdelar som varit frusna i marken. Hur påverkar detta de arktiska landskapen, ekosystemen och när cirkeln sluts, även klimatet? Wednesday 17 May, 11:00–12:00 Klimat och konflikter | Arvid Bring, Bolin Centre Hur påverkar klimatet konflikter? Har klimatet en roll i historiska konflikter, och hur kan vi ta reda på det? Kommer framtidens krig att handla om vattenresurser, eller är sådana påståenden bara skrämselpropaganda? Wednesday 17 May, 13:00–14:00 Myrar, mygg och klimatarkiv | Malin Kylander, Bolin Centre Har du någonsin funderat över marken under dina fötter? I denna föreläsning kommer vi att tala om hemligheter inlåsta i torvmossar som kan berätta om klimatförändringar under de senaste 10 000 åren i Sverige. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cecilia at misu.su.se Thu May 11 09:04:27 2017 From: cecilia at misu.su.se (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Cecilia_Wessl=E9n?=) Date: Thu, 11 May 2017 07:04:27 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] VB: PhD defense - Gustav Strandberg - May 11 Message-ID: <9c28e818bbd34fbe875cc868be56be5a@ebox-prod-srv11.win.su.se> Reminder: PhD defense today at 10.00 in De Geersalen. Från: Cecilia Wesslén Skickat: den 20 april 2017 14:06 Till: 'seminarie at misu.su.se' ; 'internt at misu.su.se' Kopia: 'bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se' Ämne: PhD defense - Gustav Strandberg - May 11 PHD DEFENSE Name Gustav Strandberg Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI) Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University, Sweden Title Modelling regional climate vegetation inter-actions in Europe - A palaeo perspective Abstract Studies in paleoclimate are important because they give us knowledge about how the climate system works and puts the current climate change in necessary perspective. By studying (pre)historic periods we increase our knowledge not just about these periods, but also about the processes that are important for climatic variations and changes. This thesis deals mainly with the interaction between climate and vegetation. Vegetation changes can affect climate in many different ways. These effects can be divided into two main categories: biogeochemical and biogeophysical processes. This thesis studies the biogeophysical effects of vegetation changes on climate in climate models. Climate models are a necessary tool for investigating how climate responds to changes in the climate system, as well as for making predictions of future climate. The biogeophysical processes are strongly related to characteristics of the land surface. Vegetation changes alter the land surface's albedo (ability to reflect incoming solar radiation), roughness and evapotranspiration (the sum of evaporation and transpiration), which in turn affects the energy fluxes between the land surface and the atmosphere and thereby the climate. It is not, however, evident in what way; denser vegetation (e.g. forest instead of grassland) gives decreased albedo, which results in higher temperature, but also increased evapotranspiration, which contrastingly results in lower temperature. Vegetation changes are in this thesis studied in four different (pre)historic periods: two very cold periods with no human influence (c. 44,000 and 21,000 years ago), one warm period with minor human influence (c. 6,000 years ago) and a cold period with substantial human influence (c. 200 years ago). In addition to that the present climate is studied. The combination of these periods gives an estimate of the effect of both natural and anthropogenic vegetation on climate in different climatic contexts. The results show that vegetation changes can change temperature with 1-3 °C depending on season and region. The response is not the same everywhere, but depends on local properties of the land surface. During the winter half of the year, the albedo effect is usually most important as the difference in albedo between forest and open land is very large. During the summer half of the year the evapotranspiration effect is usually most important as differences in albedo between different vegetation types are smaller. A prerequisite for differences in evapotranspiration is that there is sufficient amount of water available. In dry regions, evapotranspiration does not change much with changes in vegetation, which means that the albedo effect will dominate also in summer. The conclusion of these studies is that vegetation changes can have a considerable effect on climate, comparable to the effect of increasing amounts of greenhouse gases in scenarios of future climate. Thus, it is important to have an appropriate description of the vegetation in studies of past, present and future climate. This means that vegetation has the potential to work as a feedback mechanism to natural climatic variations, but also that man can alter climate by altering the vegetation. It also means that mankind may have influenced climate before we started to use fossil fuel. Consequently, vegetation changes can be used as a means to mitigate climate change locally. Time and place Thursday 11 May 2017, 10.00 De Geersalen, Geovetenskapens hus, Svante Arrheniusväg 14 Welcome! ------------------------------------------- See all seminars: misu.su.se Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: MISU on YouTube Follow MISU on Facebook and Twitter -------------- next part -------------- En HTML-bilaga skiljdes ut... URL: From rodrigo at misu.su.se Fri May 12 17:29:54 2017 From: rodrigo at misu.su.se (Rodrigo Caballero) Date: Fri, 12 May 2017 15:29:54 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Fwd: [climate-modeling@e-science.se] SeRC Visualization Summer school, August 14-16 References: Message-ID: <7F8F20C6-B5E9-484A-97F4-133D275934EE@misu.su.se> > Begin forwarded message: > > From: Olivia Eriksson > Subject: [climate-modeling at e-science.se] SeRC Visualization Summer school, August 14-16 > Date: 12 May 2017 at 16:33:12 GMT+2 > To: flow at e-science.se, electronic-structure at e-science.se, numerical-analysis at e-science.se, climate-modeling at e-science.se, bioinformatics at e-science.se, molecular-simulations at e-science.se, visualization at e-science.se, ecpc at e-science.se, brain-it at e-science.se, psde at e-science.se, application-experts at e-science.se > Cc: Ingrid Hotz > > > SeRC Visualization Summer School > 14-16 August 2017 > Visualization Center C, Norrköping > > It is also co-located with the SIGRAD conference (August 17-18, 2017). > http://scivis.itn.liu.se/sercsummerschool2017/ > > We would like to invite you to participate in our visualization summer school. It is target toward researchers from the application areas interested in visualization (master level up to post docs or also professors). > The school is free of charge. The registration is open now. We have space for 30 participants first come first serve. > > Welcome! > Ingrid Hotz > > Through, > Olivia Eriksson > Coordinator, SeRC > KTH Mechanics > Phone:+46-8-790-75-70 > Cell:+46-730-710031 > ___________________________________________________ > Message sent through mailing list: > climate-modeling at e-science.se > > Mailing list information can be found at: > https://maillist.sys.kth.se/mailman/listinfo/e-science.se_climate-modeling -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 801 bytes Desc: Message signed with OpenPGP URL: From rienk.smittenberg at geo.su.se Tue May 16 13:35:39 2017 From: rienk.smittenberg at geo.su.se (Rienk Smittenberg - SU) Date: Tue, 16 May 2017 13:35:39 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] sustainable and energy-smart house for rent half June- late August nearby SU Message-ID: <4FD30A34-FFDF-4BA4-B387-15CB7B6C7287@geo.su.se> Dear Bolin Centre scientists, Although I do realize that the Bolin list is not really meant for personal advertising, I decided to use it this time around to reach what for me is the right audience. Last year we finshed building our new house, built in a very sustainable way using almost exclusively natural and renewable materials - wood, straw and clay, at the base recycled glass (foam glass). It is well insulated and over the sunnier time of the year uses solar heat for hot water and floor/wall heating. In contrast to standard building, the house can ‘breathe’, meaning it is waterproof yet it can release water vapour just like your ‘breathable’ jacket. The house is an example of ‘green building’ with low environmental impact. Why do I tell this? Because you, or someone you know, has the chance to live in this house over the summer. The other good thing about it is that it is located on the nearest-by skärgård island of Tranholmen which lies in between Lidingö, Stocksund/Djursholm and Norra Djurgården. http://tranholmen.com/ , 20 min away from the city center and SU either by ferry to Ropsten (T-bana) (few times a day) or own boat + bike alt. 30 min walk past Lilla and Sora Skuggan. Ideal for young families as there are no cars on the island. (if you have a car there is parking available on the mainland). It has two functional bedrooms upstairs (third room is office/storage but could be used if needed) and is very spacious downstairs (with kitchen and toilet/shower). The upstairs bathroom has a functional toilet but is otherwise not yet finished. The house stands in a large garden of 1700 m2 that isn’t quite up to shape yet, but fully functional for outside breakfasts or evening grill, and you are welcome to do some gardening if you feel like it. We are looking for a responsible couple, a group of 2-4 friends or a family, who like to experience the skärgård feeling close by the city this summer and meanwhile take care of our house (e.g. make sure the plants are watered, and we have friends/neighbours just in case). The rent is negotiable depending on amount of people and usage. An ideal solution for someone who is just starting at SU or KTH and in need for an temporary place to live, or who is visiting during the summer period. If you are interested please email or call/text me, or forward the email to those you think might be interested. 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Name: IMG_7088.JPG Type: image/jpeg Size: 42033 bytes Desc: not available URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Tue May 16 13:38:11 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Tue, 16 May 2017 13:38:11 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre: Challenges in communicating science, Wednesday 17 May at 18:00 Message-ID: <1ED03601-C4C0-429A-8C41-608D0DCA68FB@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, Invitation to a discussion on Challenges in communicating science: Lessons from Arctic research Wednesday 17 May, 18:00–19:30 Nordenskiöld room, Geoscience Building, Stockholm University Moderator Susanna Baltscheffsky (SR Klotet) Panel Thomas M. Cronin, Senior Research Geologist US Geological Survey Reston Virginia, Scientific advisor to President Clinton and Bolin lecturer 2017 John Gustavsson, Principal at Väsby Nya Gymnasium, a municipality owned upper secondary school in Upplands Väsby Andrés Jato, Arctic Ambassador for Sweden to The Arctic Council Nina Kirchner, Associate professor of glaciology at Stockholm University, and director of research of the Bolin Centre for Climate Research. Questions to be addressed Why does the Arctic matter to all of us? How can scientist share their knowledge of climate in an accessible way? How much responsibility for communication can be put on scientists? On the media? What does it take to get the message through from scientist/science? How can we share climate research without being gloomy? What is the impact of festivals such as this? Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Tue May 16 14:12:23 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Tue, 16 May 2017 14:12:23 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre [Correction]: Challenges in communicating science, Wednesday 17 May at 18:00 Message-ID: Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [Correction] Invitation to a discussion on Challenges in communicating science: Lessons from Arctic research Wednesday 17 May, 18:00–19:30 Nordenskiöld room, Geoscience Building, Stockholm University Moderator Karin Klingenstierna Panel Thomas M. Cronin, Senior Research Geologist US Geological Survey Reston Virginia, Scientific advisor to President Clinton and Bolin lecturer 2017 Susanna Baltscheffsky (SR Klotet) John Gustavsson, Principal at Väsby Nya Gymnasium, a municipality owned upper secondary school in Upplands Väsby Andrés Jato, Arctic Ambassador for Sweden to The Arctic Council Nina Kirchner, Associate professor of glaciology at Stockholm University, and director of research of the Bolin Centre for Climate Research. Questions to be addressed Why does the Arctic matter to all of us? How can scientist share their knowledge of climate in an accessible way? How much responsibility for communication can be put on scientists? On the media? What does it take to get the message through from scientist/science? How can we share climate research without being gloomy? What is the impact of festivals such as this? Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. _______________________________________________ Bolincentret-at-su.se mailing list Bolincentret-at-su.se at lists.su.se https://lists.su.se/mailman/listinfo/bolincentret-at-su.se -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cecilia at misu.su.se Tue May 16 16:18:18 2017 From: cecilia at misu.su.se (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Cecilia_Wessl=E9n?=) Date: Tue, 16 May 2017 14:18:18 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Seminar - May 23 - Gunnar Myhre Message-ID: SEMINAR Name Gunnar Myhre CICERO, Norway Title Drivers of precipitation change - a model intercomparison Time and place Tuesday 23 May 2017, 11.15 Rossbysalen C609, Arrhenius Laboratory, 6th floor Welcome! ------------------------------------------- See all seminars: misu.su.se Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: MISU on YouTube Follow MISU on Facebook and Twitter -------------- next part -------------- En HTML-bilaga skiljdes ut... URL: From Alasdair.Skelton at geo.su.se Wed May 17 14:19:51 2017 From: Alasdair.Skelton at geo.su.se (Alasdair Skelton) Date: Wed, 17 May 2017 12:19:51 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Thomas Cronan - Debate - 18-19:30 today Message-ID: <87a44fad03a744d7b936d30c7e5c0362@ebox-prod-srv08.win.su.se> Dear Members of the Bolin Centre, The final part of our 3-day Climate Festival will be a panel discussion with Bert Bolin Climate Lecturer Dr. Thomas Cronan "Challenges in communicating science: Lessons from Arctic research". The debate is at 18:00-19:30 in Nordenskiöldsalen (Geovetenskapens hus). The Climate Festival has been a great success with 1300 participants *** but *** unfortunately, we do not have very many registered attendees for Thomas's panel discussion. This is a terrible shame given Thomas' high standing in climate science, at USGS and in US politics. I therefore urge you to - if at all possible - come to the panel discussion this evening, so that Thomas does not face a nearly empty room. You do not need to register - just come. If you cannot come, don't worry - no need to reply. Many thanks, Alasdair Alasdair Skelton Professor of Geochemistry and Petrology Director of the Bolin Centre for Climate Research Department of Geological Sciences Stockholm University 106 91 Stockholm Sweden Telephone: +46 76 7707699 E-mail: alasdair.skelton at geo.su.se -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From karin.jonsell at su.se Thu May 18 07:46:46 2017 From: karin.jonsell at su.se (Karin Jonsell) Date: Thu, 18 May 2017 07:46:46 +0200 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre [Reminder]: Bert Bolin Climate Lecture and Science Seminar by Dr. Thomas Cronin Message-ID: <1A5997ED-B029-437C-8DD6-699506CA3679@su.se> Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, [Reminding email] Today at 10–11 and 14–15! The Bolin Centre is very proud to announce that Dr. Thomas Cronin, U.S. Geological Survey, is invited to give this years popular science lecture in honour of Professor Bert Bolin. High School students are invited to listen among yourselves and the public. Dr. Cronin has aslo kindly agreed to give a Science Seminar in the morning of the lecture. Bolin Centre Science Seminar Speaker: Dr. Thomas Cronin, U.S. Geological Survey Time: Thursday 18 May, 10:00–11:00 Place: Nordenskiöld room, Geoscience building, Stockholm University The lecture will be streamed and saved on the Bolin Centre website Bert Bolin Climate Lecture Speaker: Dr. Thomas Cronin, U.S. Geological Survey Time: Thursday 18 May, 14:00–15:00 Place: Aula Magna, Stockholm University Yours faithfully, Karin Jonsell Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: BolinCentreScienceSeminar2017_ThomasCronin.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1145522 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: BolinLectureInvitation2017.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 2053084 bytes Desc: not available URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From qiong.zhang at natgeo.su.se Mon May 22 10:00:29 2017 From: qiong.zhang at natgeo.su.se (Qiong Zhang) Date: Mon, 22 May 2017 08:00:29 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Centre Seminar Series: (22 May) Do we need to account for ecology to model climate change? References: <29139A96-1087-491B-ACA5-D7C32FF586A9@su.se> Message-ID: <987ED44F-0B91-4D86-B4F6-E773C2DAFD31@natgeo.su.se> Dear colleagues, This is a reminder for the Bolin Centre Seminar Series today by Ben Smith from Lund University. All are welcome! Best wishes, Qiong Begin forwarded message: From: Karin Jonsell > Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Bolin Bolin Centre Seminar Series: (22 May) Do we need to account for ecology to model climate change? Date: 5 May 2017 at 12:04:37 GMT+2 To: Bolin Centre for Climate Research > Dear Bolin Centre Scientists, Welcome to the fifth seminar in the Bolin Centre Seminar Series! The host this time is Research Area 5 = Historical to millennial climate variability The seminars are intended to present Bolin Centre research area science on a level understandable for scientist who are not specialists in the field. The lectures will be streamed and saved on the Bolin Centre website. Title: Do we need to account for ecology to model climate change? Speaker: Prof. Ben Smith Lund University, Sweden Date: Monday 22 May, 2017, 13:00–14:00 Place: Alhmannsalen, Geoscience Building Summary: Terrestrial ecosystems are part of the climate system. Climate-induced changes in vegetation composition, structure, distribution and greenhouse gas exchange feed back to the atmosphere from local to global scales. Current regional and global climate models account for instantaneous biophysical responses of land surface energy and water vapour exchange with the atmosphere. Emerging Earth system models also represent longer-term responses mediated by physiological processes and ecological interactions, but issues remain. Illustrating with simulation results from offline and coupled biosphere-atmosphere simulations with LPJ-GUESS, a second-generation global vegetation-biogeochemistry model, I highlight examples of how ecology - i.e. responses of organisms to a changing physical and biotic environment - influence forcing factors of relevance to climate dynamics globally and within the contrasting bioclimatic contexts of the Arctic and tropics. Best regards, Karin Dr. Karin Jonsell Coordinator & Communicator Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden Visiting address: Room S314, Geoscience Building at Frescati, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm Phone: +46 (0)8 674 75 97 Mobile: +46 (0)70 206 2445 E-mail: karin.jonsell at su.se www.bolin.su.se The Bolin Centre for Climate Research is a collaboration between Stockholm University, KTH and the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: BolinCentre_SeminarSeries2017_RA5.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 1108540 bytes Desc: BolinCentre_SeminarSeries2017_RA5.pdf URL: -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From david.hutchinson at geo.su.se Tue May 23 09:52:25 2017 From: david.hutchinson at geo.su.se (David Hutchinson) Date: Tue, 23 May 2017 07:52:25 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Postdoc opportunities Message-ID: <19B32908-B86A-4BBB-A87F-5B1F48603B5A@geo.su.se> Dear all, A new Centre of Excellence in Climate Extremes is just getting up and running in Australia. There are many postdoc opportunities being advertised at 5 different universities in Australia, with a wide range of climate modelling positions available in different disciplines. See below. http://www.climateextremes.org.au/positions-vacant.html Cheers, David Dr David Hutchinson Postdoctoral Researcher Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University 10691 Stockholm, Sweden david.hutchinson at geo.su.se http://dkhutchinson.wordpress.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cecilia at misu.su.se Mon May 29 12:51:45 2017 From: cecilia at misu.su.se (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Cecilia_Wessl=E9n?=) Date: Mon, 29 May 2017 10:51:45 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Seminar tomorrow Message-ID: <57a95e9a0c9a4eb5abbcecb4d7792bef@ebox-prod-srv07.win.su.se> SEMINAR Name Anna Possner Carnegie Institute, Stanford University, California Title Ship tracks: A framework for evaluating aerosol cloud interactions in marine stratocumulus Time and place Tuesday 30 May 2017, 11.15 Rossbysalen C609, Arrhenius Laboratory, 6th floor Welcome! ------------------------------------------- See all seminars: misu.su.se Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: MISU on YouTube Follow MISU on Facebook and Twitter -------------- next part -------------- En HTML-bilaga skiljdes ut... URL: From cecilia at misu.su.se Tue May 30 16:50:42 2017 From: cecilia at misu.su.se (=?iso-8859-1?Q?Cecilia_Wessl=E9n?=) Date: Tue, 30 May 2017 14:50:42 +0000 Subject: [Bolincentret-at-su.se] Seminar - Bob Charlson - June 1 Message-ID: SEMINAR Name Bob Charlson University of Washington, US Title The History of Research Linking Oceanic Dimethyl Sulphide Emissions to the Earth's Albedo and Climate Time and place Thursday 1 June 2017, 14.15 Rossbysalen C609, Arrhenius Laboratory, 6th floor Welcome! ------------------------------------------- See all seminars: misu.su.se Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: MISU on YouTube Follow MISU on Facebook and Twitter -------------- next part -------------- En HTML-bilaga skiljdes ut... URL: