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Mishma Abraham, one of our Geography Ambassadors, chatting to visitors at the information fair during lunchtime in the Octagon
Science teachers and other GLOBE Program members traveled to Boulder, CO for a week-long science education workshop.
More than 4 million people rely on the Huron-to-Erie corridor for drinking water. Unfortunately, the rivers in the area have been subjected to contaminant spills and discharge over the years, leaving the St. Clair River as an Area of Concern. To help clean the rivers and protect the drinking water for those 4 million people, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality created a large-scale monitoring network. This involves data loggers at multiple sites, including Marine City, along with multi-parameter sondes, fluorometers, spectrometers, and carbon analyzers.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/st-clair-detroit-river-monit...
These posters are part of an exhibition from several years ago, still on the Hamilton College parcel on Teaching 5.
One of the earliest wildflowers to bloom in western Iowa, it is a plant that grows in marshy wetlands. These were seen near the banks of the Middle Raccoon River on land managed by the Whiterock Conservancy.
Simon Hardy (Geography BA) received the Simon Tavana Writing Prize for creative writing in human geography third year coursework. He's pictured here with the Tavana family and Professor Alastair Owens.
The 15th GLOBE Annual Meeting was held in Bethesda, Maryland, on July 17 – 22, 2011.
The theme of this year's meeting was "Expanding International Perspectives About Climate." More than 180 teachers, scientists and GLOBE community members from 46 countries (including representatives from 26 U.S. and the District of Columbia) took part in the welcoming events, informative presentations, networking sessions, poster presentations and field studies over the course of the 5-day event.
Join the GLOBE program: www.globe.gov/join-globe
The 15th GLOBE Annual Meeting was held in Bethesda, Maryland, on July 17 – 22, 2011.
The theme of this year's meeting was "Expanding International Perspectives About Climate." More than 180 teachers, scientists and GLOBE community members from 46 countries (including representatives from 26 U.S. and the District of Columbia) took part in the welcoming events, informative presentations, networking sessions, poster presentations and field studies over the course of the 5-day event.
Join the GLOBE program: www.globe.gov/join-globe
More than 4 million people rely on the Huron-to-Erie corridor for drinking water. Unfortunately, the rivers in the area have been subjected to contaminant spills and discharge over the years, leaving the St. Clair River as an Area of Concern. To help clean the rivers and protect the drinking water for those 4 million people, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality created a large-scale monitoring network. This involves data loggers at multiple sites along with multi-parameter sondes, fluorometers, spectrometers, and carbon analyzers.
Read the full story: www.nexsens.com/case_studies/st-clair-detroit-river-monit...
Bronwen Eastaugh (QMULGeography graduate, now working at Queen Mary Students' Union as Volunteering Coordinator) chatting to visitors about volunteering opportunities at QMUL
Dr Kate Heppell and Dr Fran Darlington-Pollock at the information fair during lunchtime in the Octagon
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