Managing Our Planet: The State and Fate of the Arctic
March 19, 2014 // 3:00pm — 5:00pm
Event Co-sponsors:
Environmental Change and Security Program
Canada Institute
Event Speakers
The Arctic is a sentinel of global warming where scientists predict and have observed the largest warming, melting and change, yet a region with planetary impact. Join us for a discussion of the Arctic's many changes and their implications: Environmental changes in the form of melting sea ice, greening of the Arctic tundra, migrations of species; Challenges facing indigenous people and how they are responding and coping with this changing world; and how feedbacks in the climate system may mean that the Arctic becomes more than an indicator of climate change and perhaps a source of even more greenhouse gasses. Our panel will help sort out the science from the speculation, and guide effective decisions for the future.
The “Managing Our Planet” seminar series is developed jointly by George Mason University, the Brazil Institute and the Environmental Change and Security Program. It is based on the premise that the impacts of humanity on the environment (including natural resources) are at a planetary scale, requiring planetary-scale solutions.
Photo courtesy of Flicrk user NASA Goddard.
The “Managing Our Planet” seminar series is developed jointly by George Mason University, the Brazil Institute and the Environmental Change and Security Program. It is based on the premise that the impacts of humanity on the environment (including natural resources) are at a planetary scale, requiring planetary-scale solutions.
Photo courtesy of Flicrk user NASA Goddard.
Location:
6th Floor, Woodrow Wilson Center
Event Speakers List:
-
Professor of Practice, Department of Meteorology Director, Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk
- Igor Krupnik //Curator, Arctic and the North, National Museum of Natural History
-
Research Geologist, Eastern Geology and Paleoclimate Science Center U.S. Geological Survey
- Paul Schopf //Professor of Oceanography, Associate Dean for Research and Computing, George Mason University
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