Phew! What an intense three days at the Arctic Horizon Scan 2022 Workshop. We are beyond grateful to all of the incredible contributions made by the delegates; each brought a unique set of experiences to the table.
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Snippet from the episode in which Dr Jeppe Kristensen tells about how plants trade carbon with nutrients in the soil. This is an important way in which carbon enters the ground...
New Polar Pod episode! 🎉
Come and explore the ice-age mammoth steppe with us and discover why it has been dubbed a Serengeti of the North, and how the dynamics of this ecosystem led to so much carbon being stored in permafrost today.
🦣🦣🦣
https://t.co/ZKCBhRzY73
🎧LISTEN: interested in #polar#research 🐻❄️❄? Want to hear more about the big questions its experts are tackling today? Polar Pod is a new podcast series created by @UniofOxford's @OxPolar covering exactly that. For more info & how to tune in, visit👉 https://t.co/tEMm48a9Zx
🎉New Polar Pod episode!🎉
A story set at the confluence of Sámi reindeer herding, indigenous rights, climate change, and the energy transition...
Website: https://t.co/HUMrwrH2Bw
Apple podcasts: https://t.co/Xb50jyWUMm
Spotify: https://t.co/RLWzbaaXys
Please do take a listen. It's a nuanced and complex story that I've loved working on.
Website: https://t.co/eyzFhISbtc
Apple podcasts: https://t.co/De0MQpqhc7
Spotify: https://t.co/arxbnlRNTw
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Oula-Antti Labba spent much of his childhood in Finnish Sámiland helping his family with the traditional reindeer herding work. But this traditional livelihood is under dual threat: from climate change and industrialisation of Sámi lands. 1/
@OxPolar@oxfordgeography@UniofOxford developed a podcast featuring indigenous Arctic peoples, to help protect their lives and livelihoods in discussions about the Arctic @sambcornish https://t.co/9Nxv36k8bO https://t.co/RLPbrkbMYe
Rainy weekend? Why not stick on Polar Pod and learn about permafrost carbon. We've got three 25 min episodes for you. Featuring experts, original music and sound design, and lots of food analogies 🍝 https://t.co/ZKCBhRzY73
Bc I've been moving around so much this year, Polar Pod has had to come with me... sometimes requiring a little creativity with the environs to ensure good sound. This duvet tent was for recording a few final cuts for https://t.co/Acf5cpxVOR
Thank you everyone that responded! Genuinely feeling quite touched by the feedback 🙏 the survey has now closed, but our DMs or those of @sbcornish are always open for Polar Pod feedback... More episodes coming soon!
Have you listened to Polar Pod? https://t.co/ZKCBhRimIt
We'd really appreciate your feedback to help a) improve and b) keep our funders happy
Do a good 2 min deed today:
https://t.co/p0wD3StDeZ
Thanks!
/Sam
We're driving up the Steward River near village of Mayo in NW Canada with permafrost scientist Prof Chris Burn. It's a warm summer's day and we're looking at the vegetation on the river banks. As we round the corner, we see something unexpected.
https://t.co/RpkZPdmx4w
If the amazon rainforest was a dog, what would it be? 🐶 Well, viewed through the lens of carbon storage, Dr Jeppe Kristensen's answer might surprise you.
Listen to the whole episode on permafrost carbon:
https://t.co/RpkZPdE7W4
Have you listened to Polar Pod? https://t.co/ZKCBhRimIt
We'd really appreciate your feedback to help a) improve and b) keep our funders happy
Do a good 2 min deed today:
https://t.co/p0wD3StDeZ
Thanks!
/Sam
#arctichorizonscan2022 in Oxford was intense. I met Arctic researchers and made new friends. I advocated for #Indigenous perspectives, lands, and Knowledge as well as for #participatory and co-production approaches to research! To a brighter future for #Arctic#research!
Here are our in-person delegates (minus a few who had to leave early) looking determined as we headed into our final day. Not shown are the brilliant online attendees who lent their hand to the task despite inconvenient hours and the odd technical hitch. We're super grateful.
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Phew! What an intense three days at the Arctic Horizon Scan 2022 Workshop. We are beyond grateful to all of the incredible contributions made by the delegates; each brought a unique set of experiences to the table.
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Collectively agreeing on a set of research priorities, and ways to address those priorities, was always going to be immensely challenging. But the way participants rose to the task, and were prepared to hear and make way for other perspectives, was inspiring.
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