Are you involved in catchment science – watershed hydrology,
biogeochemistry, ecology, you name it? Do you know grad students or
postdocs (or are you one) who could use a great opportunity for networking
and professional growth?

*Then apply for the 2013 Gordon Conference on Catchment Science and attend
the Gordon Research Seminar! *

This is a small conference, with just a single track of invited talks; most
people present posters, which everyone attends; and it’s held at a small
boarding school, so everyone is eating, playing, and talking together. It's
a fantastic venue for learning and building networks, and 2013 marks only
the second time a special Gordon Research Seminar has been added
specifically for early-career researchers (PhD-students, Post-Docs, …).

The deadline for applications to the Seminar has been extended to March 15!
 Apply today to have the opportunity to share your work with the larger
group.

Please pass this along to your colleagues and especially to students and
postdocs you think would be interested.

All the best from the 2013 GRS Chairs,
Kate Brauman and Jakob Schelker

******

Catchments Through the Looking Glass: From Microscopes to Telescopes

http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2013&program=catchment

http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?year=2013&program=grs_catch

The 2013 Gordon Conference on Catchment Science is entitled “Catchments
Through the Looking Glass: From Microscopes to Telescopes”, and will
explore the concept that research questions and thus research findings are
influenced by the perceptions of the researcher and the particular
techniques utilized to conduct field, laboratory and conceptual studies. As
catchment scientists working in a highly multi-disciplinary field, we each
have our own unique perspectives and vantage points from which we view our
scientific approach and interpret our data. The goal of this Gordon
Research Conference is to bring together leading experts in the field who
will explain how their particular vision and research environment have
shaped their cutting-edge research and how their approaches can be useful
and applicable to other scientists and end-users working in the field. The
conference will focus on four main themes: i) “Changes in latitudes,
changes in attitudes”, where we will assess the rationale for conducting
catchment science in polar, boreal, temperate and tropical settings as well
as its societal implication and application; ii) “Doors of perception”,
which will consider how the scale of our scientific lens, from microscopic
to telescopic and with different levels of stakeholder involvement, shapes
our understanding of catchments; iii) “Tools you can use”, which will
showcase novel analytical techniques and conceptual approaches that have
revolutionized the field; and iv) “Animal, vegetable, mineral”, where we
will explore the inextricable linkages between biota and the Earth’s
surface that help to determine catchment function and sustainability,
particularly under climate change concerns. The conference will bring
together catchment scientists with a broad range of expertise from senior
researchers working at the forefront of their field to exceptional graduate
students who are already helping to shape the future of Catchment Science.
As with previous Catchment Science GRCs, oral presentations will be by
invitation, and all conference participants are urged to present their own
research results and perspectives in poster format. The conference will be
preceded by a two-day Gordon Research Seminar, in which graduate students
and post-doctoral investigators will meet as a group to share and discuss
their cutting-edge research, build new scientific collaborations and
prepare for their interactions with more senior scientists during the GRC.

**********
Kate Brauman
Global Landscapes Initiative Postdoctoral Fellow
Institute on the Environment
University of Minnesota

[email protected]
650.380.0387

z.umn.edu/brauman

Learning and Environmental Sciences 325
1954 Buford Avenue
St. Paul, MN 55108

Reply via email to