"It's sobering and surprising to see how much snowpack is predicted to be reduced by the end of this century and how much earlier spring snowmelt happens." https://t.co/AbZNzOuu8O via @ABC citing https://t.co/V3nZsvKhvl @MusselmanKeith
Great day in the forest below Niwot Ridge, CO with a multidisciplinary team. We walked the future site of our EcoTram, a moving monitoring platform focused on water, energy, & vegetation. Stay tuned, busy summer ahead! @brianbuma1 @uw_nsgeophysics @INSTAAR
This weekend we brought together members of our multidisciplinary team of scientists at the first ever @protectourwinters Science Alliance Summit! Excited to see how we will use cutting edge science to drive science literacy and climate solutions!
We have begun posting highlights from our project StoryMap on instagram, which highlights various aspects of the project. Here is a link to the first post! https://t.co/QvreGsiCOO
The journal Nature Climate Change has a great Focus feature this week on Water in a Changing Climate. I feel honored to have one of our recent papers included in the highlight. https://t.co/3TEJdkJPhi #nature@NansAddor@INSTAAR#climate
The Arctic Rivers team created a beautiful Story Map describing the @RiversArctic project connecting Indigenous knowledge + western science to strengthen collective understanding of the changing #Arctic: https://t.co/WnwtXai9th. Check it out! #Alaska#Yukon
I'm super excited to announce my first #publication in a Nature journal which is revealing the most important processes behind streamflow across North America. 🧵
https://t.co/IAzowf6QyK
Thanks to @James_R_Craig, @Bryan_A_Tolson and R. Arsenault who had my back on this one.
We are accepting applications for the #Arctic Rivers Summit at the #Alaska Native Heritage Center in Anchorage March 29-31, 2022. The Summit is part of the Arctic Rivers Project funded by @NSF's Navigating the New Arctic Program. More information here👇 https://t.co/PFD0TBT1vJ
While lack of snow was a feature of conditions during the #MarshallFire, this was a compound extreme event: Hurricane force winds & extreme drought. How dry? @NWSBoulder#Boulder averages 4.9" of precip. from Sept thru Dec. In 2021, Sep-Dec was the driest (1.2") on record (1893).
“With any snow on the ground, this absolutely would not have happened in the way that it did.”
CU Boulder's @MusselmanKeith explained how the local drought and lack of snow set the stage for the #MarshallFire. @AP https://t.co/kD5NQlsVf1
What action can we take on climate change? Dialogue! Emphasize the seriousness of it for you - bring it into your personal narrative. How is it affecting you? What is your concern? For your family? If you’re a rancher or a farmer, for your livelihood? Communicate your narrative.
Please help us spread the word about the Arctic Rivers Summit - a small-format workshop in Anchorage AK, March 29-31, to discuss the impacts of climate change on Alaskan and Yukon rivers, fish and Indigenous communities. Space is limited. Apply here: https://t.co/v2WD2LpWSS
We are accepting applications for the #Arctic Rivers Summit at the #Alaska Native Heritage Center in Anchorage March 29-31, 2022. The Summit is part of the Arctic Rivers Project funded by @NSF's Navigating the New Arctic Program. More information here👇 https://t.co/PFD0TBT1vJ
Thrilled to be leading a new @NSF project with a team of scientists from so many disciplines! https://t.co/Xv0D9QPXn0. Working with land managers in the #Colorado Front Range, we'll study how climate change & population pressures impact ecosystems and what we can do. @INSTAAR
#Arctic Rivers Project team member, Nicole Herman-Mercer, recently published “A Decade of Indigenous Knowledge Research in the Yukon River Basin: Reflection on ‘Indigenous Observations of Change in the Lower Yukon River Basin, Alaska.’” Check it out:
https://t.co/w3UzLzZU7d