Grand Valley State University kicks off a celebration of International
Polar Year with an expert in glacial geology and paleoclimatology who
will compare past and current observations of melting ice sheets in
response to climate warming.
Anders Carlson, from the Department of Geology and Geophysics at
University of Wisconsin – Madison, will speak on "Changing Ice
& Snow: What the Past Can Tell Us About the Future." The free
public lecture, on Thursday, October 11, is at 7 p.m., in 101 Loutit
Lecture Hall, Padnos Hall, Allendale Campus.
Less than a decade ago, most climate scientists thought such a rapid
response to climate change by ice sheets was highly unlikely. While the
number of observations of Arctic and Antarctic ice retreat is growing,
their time span is limited to the last decade or so, hindering
scientists’ ability to predict the future.
Carlson will focus on the behavior and retreat of ice sheets under past
"natural" global warming experiments, specifically the last
deglaciation of the Northern Hemisphere 21,000 to 6,000 years ago when
ice sheets retreated from North America and Northern Europe forced by a
warming climate.
Sponsored by: the Regional Math and Science Center at Grand Valley State
University (GVSU), GVSU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the
Michigan Space Grant Consortium. Refreshments to follow lecture.
For more information on additional International Polar Year activities
at Grand Valley, visit www.gvsu.edu/ipy
or call Karen Meyers in the Regional Math & Science Center at (616) 331-2515.
Global warming lecturer kicks off International Polar Year celebration
Subscribe
Sign up and receive the latest Grand Valley headlines delivered to your email inbox each morning.