Rose Abramoff (@ultracricket) spoke with Roland Pease and Dr. Mika Tosca on BBC Sounds yesterday about #AGU2022.

#ScientistActivist #ClimateAction

https://twitter.com/peaseroland/status/1616163925367656448?s=12

Roland Pease on Twitter

β€œClimate activism - what is the role of scientists. Science in Action goes big on whether researchers engaging in protests help spread the word, or undermine the message. With @ultracricket @trans_icon_mika @StuartBCapstick and Rob Young of @wcu https://t.co/8u5YW0AG4J”

Twitter

Rose Abramoff (@ultracricket) was fired from her research position at Oak Ridge National Laboratory for holding a banner at the #AGU2022 meeting in December. We’re only energized by her courage and determination!
#ClimateCrisis #IntoTheStreets

Climate scientist: Getting fired for activism 'gave me a lot of hope' | CNN

https://www.cnn.com/videos/tv/2023/01/18/rose-abramoff-science-climate-change-amanpour-protest.cnn

Geoscientists of the world are lucky that #agu2022 was last week! It is getting cold πŸ₯Άin Chicago this week and the ❄️❄️❄️is coming for the end of the week.
Enjoyed talking to y’all at #AGU2022 this morning about Europa and icy moon science. Hope to keep seeing everyone at future events!

Session conveners and moderators are faced with a couple of presenters who were unable to attend the meeting.

That means staying on track for online attendees who may want to access the meeting at the scheduled time. Great and inclusive moderating technique. #AGU22 #AGU2022

"Consequences of environmental change" was the prompt provided to #mindjourney to generate this image.

The prompt is a quote from "Catchment and Critical Zone Science – Understanding Ecosystems Through Monitoring, Analysis, and Experimentation II" the fourth of four sessions convened today at #AGU22.

πŸ”— πŸ—“οΈ https://bit.ly/3Wn27i6

We'll be replying to his post as we post live from our final session at #AGU2022.

Catchment and Critical Zone Science – Understanding Ecosystems Through Monitoring, Analysis, and Experimentation II Oral

Catchment, critical zone, and ecosystem studies are foundational to hydrological and biogeochemical process understanding. These place-based studies with sustained monitoring have shaped our understanding of fundamental processes and consequences of environmental change on ecosystems. They also inform environmental policy and lead to transformative ideas that advance science and benefit society. In this session we seek contributions that synthesize hydrologic and biogeochemical findings and concepts, including across sites and over time. We encourage contributions from catchment, critical zone, and observatory studies, particularly research programs that are crucial to scientific discovery, resource management, shaping policy, or promoting societal well-being.

AGU - Fall Meeting 2022

Perfect way to roll into your #AGU22 Friday afternoon. And you can join in from wherever you are in McCormick Place, keep resting those feet for the afternoon poster session.

"Global Impact of Non-perennial Waterways: Integrating Hydrological, Geochemical, Microbiological, and Social Perspectives" is co-convened by Big Data Cluster member Erin Seybold.

πŸ”— πŸ—“οΈ https://bit.ly/CZNAGU22121606

#AGU2022 #hydrology #biogeosciences

Global Impact of Non-perennial Waterways: Integrating Hydrological, Geochemical, Microbiological, and Social Perspectives I Online Poster Discussion

Non-perennial systems are globally prevalent waterways, impacting a breadth of critical ecosystem and societal services. This session explores the diverse and complex processes occurring in non-perennial waterways, bringing together hydrological, biogeochemical, ecological, geomorphological, microbiological, and socio-economic perspectives on non-perennial systems. We encourage contributions spanning a variety of non-perennial waterways (e.g., intermittent rivers, ephemeral streams, agricultural ditches, urban drainage systems, and wetlands) and those that explore responses of these vulnerable systems to anthropogenic change. We seek to highlight work across spatial scales (e.g., individual stream reaches to regional/global analyses), temporal scales (e.g., individual events to long-term dynamics), and methods, including field-based research, experimental approaches, remote sensing, machine learning, qualitative methods, and policy work. Our session emphasizes the varied scales and interdisciplinary approaches required to understand non-perennial waterways and their influence on ecosystems and society.

AGU - Fall Meeting 2022

"Dynamic flow regime" was the prompt provided to #midjourney which generated this illustration.

The prompt is a quote from the abstract for "Linking oxygen regimes to flow regimes in non-perennial streams", part of a Friday afternoon #AGU22 poster session presented by Cluster member Erin Seybold.

πŸ”— πŸ—“οΈ https://bit.ly/CZNAGU22121611

A great addition to your final afternoon exploring #CriticalZone #hydrology research in the #AGU2022 poster hall.

Linking oxygen regimes to flow regimes in non-perennial streams

Non-perennial streams are defined by a dynamic flow regime encompassing lotic (...

AGU - Fall Meeting 2022
I am talking today at #AGU2022 on our new #NSF supported #BioFI effort, BioFI - The Biodiversity Forecasting Initiative to Understand Population, Community, and Ecosystem Function Under Climate Change ... https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm22/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/1086147
BioFI - The Biodiversity Forecasting Initiative to Understand Population, Community, and Ecosystem Function Under Climate Change.

Anticipating and understanding how biodiversity loss will impact ecosystems and...

AGU - Fall Meeting 2022

Goodbye Chicago and #AGU #Agu22 #agu2022 ! This was my first post pandemic conference and I had a blast. It was great to reconnect with so many colleagues after the years in isolation.

Last pitch, if you are still at agu tomorrow afternoon, stop by Ash Cale's poster!