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Stockton farm sustainability coordinator Caitlin Clarke take a photo of a bug on a tomato. Credit: Diane D'Amico/Stockton University
QMUL Geography graduate and Citizens UK representative Yasmin Aktar chats with visitors about how they can work with local communities as part of their time at QMUL Geography
Visitors gather around the Learning Island at lunchtime to find out more about our degree programmes
The pier at the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory, Solomons, Maryland, 1956.
Attribution: University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
Our editor, Daniel Kelly, got to go in the field with Northern Kentucky University scientists studying constructed wetlands. Green infrastructure sites are getting more popular these days and this study looks to investigate their costs and benefits.
This wetland is used to filter water that flows into a tributary of the Licking River and ultimately empties into the Ohio River.
Read the full story here:
www.fondriest.com/news/northern-kentucky-u-researchers-in...
Stockton farm sustainability coordinator Caitlin Clarke, left, looks at tomatoes harvested at the farm with students Dylan Bell, 20, of Medford and Erika Perez, 19, of Galloway Township. Credit: Diane D'Amico/Stockton University
Arctic waters are warming faster than expected, which is leading to a loss in sea ice. With less ice to block the way, many anticipate the Arctic will become a more popular shipping route. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has begun preparing for more Arctic operations by deploying a NexSens CB-950 data buoy to monitor water conditions. Sensors include bottom-mounted conductivity, temperature and depth instruments as well as a topside weather station and GPS receiver to track the buoy's exact location.
Read the full story here:
www.fondriest.com/news/noaa-readies-buoy-platform-arctic-...
Graduate Nick Hajdu rounds up the day sharing his experience at QMUL Geography and what he has done since graduation
From left: Students Edward McLaughlin, 19, of Ocean City, Erika Perez, 19, of Galloway Township, Sean McBride, 19, of North Wildwood, Stockton farm sustainability coordinator Caitlin Clarke, and student Dylan Bell, 20, of Medford, review work to do on the farm. Credit: Diane D'Amico/Stockton University
Laura Peterson, Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Chemistry, leads a Paideia Texts and Issues Lecture regarding "Back to the Future: Understanding the Anthropocene." March 15, 2016. Photo by: Annie Goodroad '19
Plant Facilities Utilities Manager Everett Wickline took on the role of educator as he explained all that is involved with waster water treatment at the NMH settlement ponds, to students in Becca Malloy's AP Environmental Science class on November 8, 2018. Photography by Glenn Minshall.
This is me (center) with 2 co-workers, Paul and Chelsea (right and left), after performing my first Dolphin Necropsy (animal autopsy). The animal washed ashore in Corolla, NC and we hauled it off the beach and drove it down to Nags Head, NC to necropsy. I found out it was a very messy process and it took 2 showers to get all the blood off and I never did manage to get the stains out of my shorts!
Employer: NC Wildlife Resources Commission
Major: Environmental Science
Qualtrics ID: 144.118.102.6
Please Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. Please respect "My Copyright ©2014" - All rights reserved.
QMUL Geography graduate and Citizens UK representative Yasmin Aktar chats with visitors about how they can work with local communities as part of their time at QMUL Geography
Surveys of drought-weakened Sierra Nevada streams are turning up sparse numbers of fish.Researchers with the University of California, Davis' Center for Watershed Science gathered insights that could aid in conservation efforts that are expected to grapple with climate change.
Read the full story: www.fondriest.com/news/sierra-nevada-streams-researchers-...
Photos courtesy of UC Davis Watershed Sciences Center
Dr David Pinder chats with visitors about how our students apply their knowledge to solve real-world problems at the Engaging Island
Plant Facilities Utilities Manager Everett Wickline took on the role of educator as he explained all that is involved with waster water treatment at the NMH settlement ponds, to students in Becca Malloy's AP Environmental Science class on November 8, 2018. Photography by Glenn Minshall.
Regardless of their stance on fracking, residents of the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania and southern New York all agreed that the fracking should be monitored. An interstate agency, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission, manages water resources within the watershed with an expansive monitoring network. Their 58 stations continuously monitor temperature, pH, specific conductance, dissolved oxygen and turbidity.
Read more about this giant monitoring effort: www.fondriest.com/news/susquehanna-river-monitoring-netwo...
Photos courtesy of the SRBC. The site map was created by Fondriest Environmental.