Wednesday, March 25, 2015

ehPECS Tweet Storm March 26th!

Hello APECS Canada,

Happy Polar Week! This is a great time of year during the equinox to chat about polar science and host fun events in your community or university. For great polar movie night ideas check out the NFB Sharing our Stories project: https://www.nfb.ca/playlist/unikkausivut-sharing-our-stories/

As you have seen, the APECS social media team is hosting a Polar Week Tweet Storm and encourages all APECS members who are on facebook or twitter to send out a science fact, thought, or photo this week tagged  #PolarWeek. I think it will be most time effective if we designate ehPECS Day March 26th during the week where we focus our efforts! Let's tag our tweets using #PolarWeek and @ehPECS

Follow APECS @PolarResearch and APECS Canada @ehPECS for more updates. Details on the international Tweet Storm below. 

Looking forward to hearing about your polar adventures on twitter March 26th

Cheers!
-Meagan


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Help us start a Polar Week Tweet Storm
 
To advance the presence of polar science within the broader scientific community and society at large, the APECS social media committee would like to invite you to participate in the first ever Polar Week Tweet Storm from March 21st -29th.
 
Starting on March 21st and continuing throughout the week, we are asking you to tweet polar-related posts and include the hashtag #PolarWeek.
 
Our APECS Twitter account has over 3000 followers. Imagine if for 1 week, half the people on that list tweeted 3 new posts and retweeted 5 others, all in one day. That's 12,000 tweets per day; over 100,000 for the week. It will cause people to notice.
 
The goal of our Tweet Storm is to share the importance of polar ecosystems with the world. By tweeting and retweeting together, we can reach a broader audience. It will also strengthen our own community and potentially open the door to new connections and collaborations. If you haven't joined Twitter yet, now is the perfect time to do so and get involved!
 
Some general guidelines about what we are trying to do:
 
- Starting March 21st, tweet polar related posts using the #PolarWeek hashtag.
 
Aim to post a minimum of 3 tweets (or more) per day, so 27 for the week.
 
- Variety is the spice of life. You can post anything polar-related: thoughts, facts, ideas, pictures, quotes, links, you name it. Even promote your blog or research program. Just be sure to include #PolarWeek in somewhere in your post.
 
-  You can repost the same tweet more than once. The audience at 1pm Tuesday is not the same as the audience at 3am Friday.
 
Try to retweet at least 5 #PolarWeek tweets by other people per day. More or fewer is just fine too; the goal is to spread the polar week message.
 
We are stronger as a community than alone. Let's storm Twitter together and bring the poles to centre stage!
 
Remember to follow APECS and the social media team!
◦       @Polar_Research – APECS
◦       @jennifer_balmer– Jennifer Balmer
◦       @WideWhiteStage – Hanne Nielsen

And watch the #PolarWeek hashtag!  



---
Meagan Grabowski
MSc Student
Dept of Zoology
University of British Columbia
grabowski@zoology.ubc.ca
http://meagangrabowski.weebly.com/

Fwd: Call for Applications: Jane Glassco Northern Fellowship – 2015-2017 Cohort



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Walter & Duncan Gordon <info@gordonfn.org>
Date: Thu, Mar 19, 2015 at 3:01 PM
Subject: Call for Applications: Jane Glassco Northern Fellowship – 2015-2017 Cohort
To: "annbala@gmail.com" <annbala@gmail.com>


Dear friends,

 

Jane Glassco Northern Fellowship – 2015-2017 Cohort

Application Deadline: Received by Monday, June 1, 2015

 

The Gordon Foundation is pleased to announce its third call for applications to the Jane Glassco Northern Fellowship, a policy and leadership development program.

The Fellowship brings together young northerners, aged 25 to 35, who want to build a strong North that benefits northerners. It incorporates self-directed study, collective learning and mentorship with the aim of empowering young northerners to build healthy, self-reliant and sustainable northern communities. The Fellowship is for those who, at this stage in their lives, are looking for additional support, networks and guidance from mentors. Fellows will join peers from across the North at gatherings throughout Canada to deepen their understanding of important issues facing their region, and develop policy ideas to help address them.

We are looking for ten (10) Fellows for the third cohort of the two-year Fellowship (2015-2017) and we need your help in our search!

How you can help:

1.       Direct anyone who qualifies and who might be interested to our website: http://gordonfoundation.ca/north/jane-glassco-northern-fellowship/apply

2.       Check out our BROCHURE on the Jane Glassco Northern Fellowship

3.       Request promotional materials to distribute to young northerners in your community.

Feel free to forward this email to your network to get the word out!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Kind regards,

 

Holly Mackenzie

Program Manager

Jane Glassco Northern Fellowship

 

 

 

This message has been scanned via McAfee Email Protection Services.



--
Ann Balasubramaniam
PhD Candidate
Water Lab
200 University Ave
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1
519-888-4567 ext.36540
annbala@gmail.com



--
Jennifer Provencher
jenniferprovencher.com

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

FW: ACUNS 2015 Due North: Call for Abstracts Now Open

Dear APECS Canada,

 

Apologies for cross-posting!

We wanted to share this notice about our international ACUNS 2015 Student Conference being hosted by the Arctic Institute of North America and the University of Calgary in November. Abstract submission opened today. There will be a chance to apply for student travel awards, and updates on that will be posted on the conference website soon.

Please distribute to anyone who  may  be interested. Thanks!

Gaby

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Gabriela Ibarguchi, M. Sc., Ph .D.

Associate Director, International Study of Arctic Change (ISAC)

Eyes High Postdoctoral Associate, Arctic Institute of North America (AINA), University of Calgary
2500 University Drive NW, ES-1040, Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada

http://arctic.ucalgary.ca/ | (403) 220-7294 | http://www.arcticchange.org/

gabriela.ibarguchi@ucalgary.ca

 

From: ACUNS Student Conference 2015 [mailto:acuns15@ucalgary.ca]
Sent: Monday, March 02, 2015 11:57 AM
Subject: ACUNS 2015 Due North: Call for Abstracts Now Open

 

The Organizing Committee of ACUNS 2015 Due North: Next Generation Arctic Research & Leadership is pleased to announce that the Call for Abstracts in now open.  The Conference will take place in Calgary November 5-8, 2015.

Abstracts will be accepted until May 31, 2015.   Please share this information with all colleagues and students.

 

To submit an abstract, please visit the ACUNS 2015 Abstract Submission Page (https://arctic.ucalgary.ca/webform/acuns-2015-abstract-submission); to register for the conference, please visit the ACUNS 2015 Conference Registration Page (https://arctic.ucalgary.ca/civicrm/event/info?reset=1&id=7)

BACKGROUND:

The Arctic Institute of North America and the University of Calgary will host the next Association of Canadian Universities for Northern Studies 2015 Student Conference (ACUNS 2015) from November 5-8, 2015. This interdisciplinary conference is a gathering of early career scholars working on all topics related to the circumpolar North (http://arctic.ucalgary.ca/acuns-2015-student-conference ). We are pleased to announce that ACUNs 2015 will include pre-conference workshops starting on Nov. 4th, meetings, networking opportunities, and other side events, including an optional tour to Banff National Park on Nov. 9th.  

Conference Themes:

C1: Arctic Communities: Resilience, Management, Culture, Indigenous Knowledge.

C2: Arctic Sustainable Development: Sovereignty, Infrastructure, Healthcare, Tourism, Land Management, Protected areas, Citizen Engagement.

C3: Arctic Wildlife, Ecosystem and Biodiversity: Flora & Fauna, Vegetation, Habitats, Food system, Migration patterns, Wildlife health and monitoring, Forest fire, Species Endangerment, Impacts, Conservation, Management.

C4: Arctic Food Security: Food sovereignty, Subsistence, Productivity, Transportation, Food safety.

C5: Arctic Landscapes: Geology, Geomorphology, Hydrology, Glaciology.

C6: Climate Change and adaptation: Arctic Warming, Extreme events, Climate variability, Biogeochemical Cycles, Changing Landscapes, Building Resilience.

C7: Disaster Risk Management: Oil Spills, Toxic contaminants, Coastal Floods, Mitigation, Capacity Building.

C8: Policy, Politics and Leadership: Commerce, Geopolitics, Climate Laws, International Organizations.

C9: Arctic Environment (Data and Techniques): Remote Sensing, Modeling, Surveying, Data sources, Ice core drilling.

C10: Arctic Resources: Renewable energy, Fossil fuels, Fishing, Oil and Gas, Exploitation, Consultation.

C11: Future of Arctic: Opportunities & Vulnerabilities, Mitigation, Culture, Climate, Wildlife, Indigenous Communities, Economy, Sustainability

A pdf version of this document is attached. More conference information can be found on the conference website.

Please contact the conference organizing committee at acuns15@ucalgary.ca if you have any questions.

We look forward to seeing you! We are still looking for volunteers to help us organize this event and to promote the conference at your own institutions. Contact us for more information.

 

 

Association for Canadian Universities for Northern Studies (ACUNS)/ Association universitaire canadiennes d’études nordique (AUCEN)

11th Annual Student Conference/11e Conférence annuelle des étudiants

November 5-8, 2015

Calgary, Alberta Canada

Email: acuns15@ucalgary.ca

Website: http://arctic.ucalgary.ca/acuns-2015-student-conference

 

 

 

New ECR discussion paper on permafrost

Hi all,

 

See below link to and abstract of a new paper by Fritz et al. 2015, titled 'Brief Communication: Future avenues for permafrost science from the perspective of early career researchers'. Several APECS members contributed to this paper as well.

 

Link: http://epic.awi.de/37425/1/tcd-9-1209-2015.pdf

 

Abstract: Accelerating climate change and increased economic and environmental interest in permafrost-affected regions have resulted in an acute need for more directed permafrost research. In June 2014, 88 early career researchers convened to identify future priorities for permafrost research. This multidisciplinary forum concluded that five research topics deserve greatest attention: permafrost landscape dynamics; permafrost thermal modelling; integration of traditional knowledge; spatial analysis of permafrost types and vulnerability; and engineering issues. These topics underline the need for integrated research across a spectrum of permafrost-related domains and constitute a contribution to the Third International Conference on Arctic Research Planning (ICARP III).

 

 

Regards,

 

Nikolaus Gantner

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APECS Canada board member