Thursday, January 16, 2020

[IPRNmail] Re: Mentoring, applications webinar

Hi Renuka

Season's greetings.
I am happy to be on the mentor list for any webinars that are being planned by IPRN!

However, I did not receive any emails from Rupa or any IPRN ex-com member about organizing webinars.
I believe that some Excom reconstitution process was ongoing, but no idea about the status.

Cheers

Roseline



On Fri, Jan 10, 2020 at 4:33 PM Badhe, R. [Renuka] <r.badhe@nwo.nl> wrote:

Hello all – I've not heard anything yet? It is now nearly one year since this email.

-Renuka

 

From: Rupa R <roop.bhardwaj2710@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, February 6, 2019 10:52 AM
To: Badhe, R. [Renuka] <r.badhe@nwo.nl>
Cc: neelu singh NCAOR <neelu.singh0387@gmail.com>; alok@ncaor.gov.in; Swati Nagar <swati23n@gmail.com>; Roseline Cutting <roseline.cutting@gmail.com>; iprnindia@googlegroups.com; austral.ap@gmail.com; Anant Pande <anantpande1984@gmail.com>; IPRN <indian.polar@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Mentoring, applications webinar

 

Yes, Definitely. Will inform you soon. Thank you :)

Regards

Rup

 

On Wed, Feb 6, 2019 at 3:13 PM Badhe, R. [Renuka] <r.badhe@nwo.nl> wrote:

All good! Let me know once everything has been decided. I hope to see something by the first week of March – so that people who would like to apply for the SCAR fellowships can follow the guidance for the 2019 round..

All the best!

=R

 

From: Rupa R <roop.bhardwaj2710@gmail.com>
Sent: 06 February 2019 10:41
To: Badhe, R. [Renuka] <r.badhe@nwo.nl>
Cc: neelu singh NCAOR <neelu.singh0387@gmail.com>; alok@ncaor.gov.in; Swati Nagar <swati23n@gmail.com>; Roseline Cutting <roseline.cutting@gmail.com>; iprnindia@googlegroups.com; austral.ap@gmail.com; Anant Pande <anantpande1984@gmail.com>; IPRN <indian.polar@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Mentoring, applications webinar

 

Hi Renuka,

Yes, the webinar will be done soon based on the availability of the people involved. The ExCom reconstitution process is speeding up and will be done in next 2-3 weeks. 

Neelu and Swati (both cc'ed) both are members of APECS International ExCom and happily involved with the IPRN activities. They are always the firsts to be contacted for any IPRN venture. 

For now, we have just identified a few people who can potentially be involved in the webinar though we will work on involving more scholars. I will ask the current ExCom members about setting the webinar dates and/or if we can do this simultaneously with the ExCom reconstitution process. 

We will start contacting the mentors about their availability once we get some date slots for the webinar. Or I can better get back to you about this after discussing with team if that's fine?

 

regards

Rupa

 

 

On Wed, Feb 6, 2019 at 2:48 PM Badhe, R. [Renuka] <r.badhe@nwo.nl> wrote:

Also – Surely there's plenty more senior researchers at NCPOR that can be added to this list – anyone from NCPOR could add a few names on?

 

By the way – have you sought permission from the people listed below to be listed as mentors?

 

-R

 

 

From: Rupa R <roop.bhardwaj2710@gmail.com>
Sent: 06 February 2019 10:09
To: Renuka Badhe <renuka@cantab.net>
Cc: neelu singh NCAOR <neelu.singh0387@gmail.com>; alok@ncaor.gov.in; Swati Nagar <swati23n@gmail.com>; Roseline Cutting <roseline.cutting@gmail.com>; iprnindia@googlegroups.com; austral.ap@gmail.com; Anant Pande <anantpande1984@gmail.com>; IPRN <indian.polar@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Mentoring, applications webinar

 

Hi Renuka,

Thank you very much for your email and I apologise for the delay in response as I was collecting the information. 

IPRN is in process of reconstitution for now and various webinar themes, including the one suggested by you which is quite interesting and useful, will be discussed once we get our new ExCom soon. 

We have identified following senior researchers as mentors for the students.

 

 

Name                                       Affiliation                                                                          Contact details

Dr. Sharmik Patil                     DST Inspire Faculty at NCPOR                                        shramik@ncaor.gov.in

Dr. Archana Dayal                  PhD student at Sheffield University                                  archanadayal@gmail.com 

Dr. Jai Prakash Chaubey        Post Doc at University of Sherbrook                                 jai.chaubey@gmail.com 

Dr. Santonu Goswami            Scientist SE, Indian Space Research Organization           santonu@gmail.com

Dr. Shridhar Jawak                Remote Sensing Officer, SIOS                                       shridhar.jawak@gmail.com                                            

Dr. Sabuj Bhattacharya          Post Doc at Indian Institute of Science                            

sabujb@iisc.ac.in

Dr. Roseline Cutting              Post Doc at University of Helsinki                                     roseline.cutting@gmail.com                                

 

I hope this helps. Please do let me know for further information required.

 

Best

Rupa


...................................

 

 

 

On Tue, Feb 5, 2019 at 6:37 AM Anant Pande <anantpande1984@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Renuka

 

We havent conducted any webinar so far but classroom career guidance sessions were conducted as part of science communication workshops done for last two years. 

 

I am currently travelling to Nicobar and hence have poor net connectivity. Requesting Rupa to reply to the mail for identifying senior researchers as mentors for the younger students.

 

Regards

Anant

 

On 3 Feb 2019 18:17, "Neelu Singh" <neelu.singh0387@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Renuka,

 

As far as I know, no webinar have conducted till now (Everone please correct me if am wrong).

 

Best,

Neelu

 

On Sun, Feb 3, 2019 at 1:43 PM Renuka Badhe <renuka@cantab.net> wrote:

If you know the answer you can also reply Neelu :) 

 

On Sun, 3 Feb 2019 at 13:36, Neelu Singh <neelu.singh0387@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Anant and Rupa,

 

As we all know that you two are looking for the IPRN.

Please reply Renuka ASAP.

 

Best,

Neelu. 

 

 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Renuka Badhe <renuka@cantab.net>
Date: Sun, Feb 3, 2019 at 1:19 PM
Subject: Re: Mentoring, applications webinar
To: <iprnindia+owners@googlegroups.com>
Cc: Roseline Cutting <roseline.cutting@gmail.com>, Rupa Bhardwaj <roop.bhardwaj2710@gmail.com>, Swati Nagar <swati23n@gmail.com>, alok@ncaor.gov.in <alok@ncaor.gov.in>, austral.ap@gmail.com <austral.ap@gmail.com>, <iprnindia@googlegroups.com>, neelu singh <neelu.singh0387@gmail.com>

 

Whoever is currently responsible for IPRN, Am I going to get a response for my email?

 

-Renuka 

 

On Fri, 1 Feb 2019 at 10:08, Renuka Badhe <renuka@cantab.net> wrote:

Dear IPRN - I've recently recieved a request to help me with an application for a fellowship from within India. Have IPRN done any webinars so far regarding applications abroad? If not, please consider doing this, inviting the senior researchers in India who can provide pointers and also juniors who have successfully applied for these kind of fellowships.

 

Who are the senior members currently who can provide Mentorship for such requests?

 

Please let me know the answers for both. 

 

Thanks,

Renuka

--

 

-----------------------
Renuka Badhe
Executive Secretary
European Polar Board
Address: NWO, Laan van Nieuw Oost-Indië 300, 2593 CE The Hague, Netherlands

Email: r.badhe@nwo.nl
LinkedIN: uk.linkedin.com/pub/renuka-badhe/3/96/6b6
Twitter: @drrenukabadhe
-----------------------

--

 

-----------------------
Renuka Badhe
Executive Secretary
European Polar Board
Address: NWO, Laan van Nieuw Oost-Indië 300, 2593 CE The Hague, Netherlands

Email: r.badhe@nwo.nl
LinkedIN: uk.linkedin.com/pub/renuka-badhe/3/96/6b6
Twitter: @drrenukabadhe
-----------------------


 

--

Best Regards

 

***************************************************

Neelu Singh
Research Scholar

India

 

Mailtrack

Sender notified by
Mailtrack 02/03/19, 1:26:16 PM

--

 

-----------------------
Renuka Badhe
Executive Secretary
European Polar Board
Address: NWO, Laan van Nieuw Oost-Indië 300, 2593 CE The Hague, Netherlands

Email: r.badhe@nwo.nl
LinkedIN: uk.linkedin.com/pub/renuka-badhe/3/96/6b6
Twitter: @drrenukabadhe
-----------------------


 

--

Best Regards

 

***************************************************

Neelu Singh
Research Scholar

India



--
Regards


Roseline C. Thakur
Post Doctoral Researcher
Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research (INAR)
University of Helsinki, Finland.



"Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known." 
― Carl Sagan

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Sunday, October 20, 2019

[IPRNmail] IPRN Executive Committee (Ex-com) Reconstitution

Dear Members

Some of you have already indicated your interest in being a part of IPRN leadership. As you are aware that IPRN Executive Committee (ex-com) reconstitution process has been started for which we are seeking nominations. 
Kindly mail back by 31 October 2019, if you wish to be a part of IPRN Ex-com 2019-20.


Regards
Rupa
NC Representative
Indian Polar Research Network (APECS-India)

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Tuesday, July 23, 2019

[IPRNmail] Vacancy in Antarctic Wildlife Monitoring Program at Wildlife Institute of India

Dear All

The Antarctic Wildlife Monitoring Program at Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun has advertised for a Project Fellow position to work on Antarctic marine megafauna through a walk-in written exam cum interview. Eligible  candidates may go through the requirements via the link given below. Please read all the instruction very carefully before applying. 

regards
Team IPRN
Indian Polar Research Network (APECS-India)

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Wednesday, May 22, 2019

[IPRNmail] National Conference on Polar Sciences (NCPS-2019) at NCPOR, Goa

Dear IPRN Members

Please see the call of abstracts for National Conference on Polar Sciences (NCPS-2019) to be held at NCPOR, Goa. There are travel grants available to present your work in the conference.

Team IPRN
Indian Polar Research Network (APECS-India)

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: NCPS 2019 <ncps2019@ncaor.gov.in>
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2019 at 14:23
Subject: Announcement of a National Conference on Polar Sciences (NCPS-2019) at NCPOR

Dear Sir,

I am delighted to inform you that NCPOR is going to hold a National Conference on Polar Sciences (NCPS-2019) during August 20-22, 2019.

NCPS-2019 aims to bring eminent researchers working in diverse polar regions of Arctic, Antarctic, Southern Ocean and the Himalayas to a common ground where the interdisciplinary approaches can be discussed to address the various scientific and operational issues. This event will also provide a platform for Early Career Researchers to interact, exchange their research ideas, findings and experiences.

We are looking forward to your participation by submitting your findings in a suitable theme and sessions related to your field. I request you to kindly encourage your colleagues and young researchers to actively participate and submit their research findings related to their field. The successes of this conference will indeed depend on your support to take our Nation to newer heights in the field of Polar Research.

I will also request you to please forward the attached brochure to people whom you know are working in polar realms. Wide publicity is required as the time is too short.

Please find the NCPS -2019 Brochure first announcement as an attachment. For more details & updates, see the conference website: www.ncps2019.ncaor.gov.in

Thanking you

With best regards

Avinash

डॉ. अविनाश कुमार | Dr. Avinash Kumar
Convener, National Conference on Polar Sciences (NCPS-2019)
वैज्ञानिक 'डी' | Scientist 'D'
राष्ट्रीय ध्रुवीय एवं समुद्री अनुसंधान केन्द्र | National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research
पृथ्वी विज्ञान मंत्रालय | भारत सरकार | Ministry of Earth Sciences | Govt. of India
हेडलैंड साडा, वास्को दा गामा, गोवा - 403 804 | Headland Sada, Vasco-da-Gama, Goa - 403 804 | India

Phone No: +91-832-2525-695 (O) | +91-832-2556488 (R) | +91-9158536334 (M)


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Monday, April 22, 2019

[IPRNmail] Final Reminder: Need Volunteers for conducting IPRN ex-com election

Dear Members

As you are aware that IPRN Executive Committee (ex-com) reconstitution process has been started, we need your help in conducting elections for the term of 2019-20. 
This is the Final Reminder regarding the reconstitution of IPRN Ex-Com 2019-2020.
The election process will take about 4 weeks to complete after the formation of the Election Steering Committee comprising of 2 senior members, 2 currently active APECS members and 3 volunteers. 
Kindly send us your willingness to volunteer in this regard by this Friday, April 26, 2019. Once we receive enough number of consents, we would begin with the election process to be shared with all. 

regards
Rupa
APECS National Representative IPRN (2018-19)
For Team IPRN
Indian Polar Research Network (APECS-India)

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Tuesday, March 26, 2019

[IPRNmail] 2603 latest antarctic update

1. Scientists set sail on expedition to investigate 'Iceberg Alley' off Antarctica

The 5.4 million-square-mile Antarctic Ice Sheet is the greatest mass of fresh water on Earth. If it all were to melt, it would raise global sea levels some 220 feet. Searching for answers to how fast the ice might react to changes in climate, scientists are now studying how that ice reacted to past warm periods similar to today's.
More than two dozen researchers aboard the drillship JOIDES Resolution left Punta Arenas, Chile, on March 20. They will obtain cores of sediment from a remote section of seafloor, where ancient icebergs are believed to have left clues.
With information from these cores, the researchers hope to chart how the ice sheet waxed and waned in response to climate over the past 10 million years.
The two-month cruise is Expedition 382: Iceberg Alley and Subantarctic Ice and Ocean Dynamics of the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP), a collaboration of scientists that coordinates large-scale ocean expeditions to study the Earth's history as it is recorded in sediments beneath the ocean floor.
On IODP Expedition 382, scientists plan to drill cores from the floor of the Scotia Sea off the Antarctic Peninsula.
As snow falls on Antarctica, it slowly builds up and turns into ice in the continent's interior. The ice then becomes glaciers, which move outward toward the coast. The ice carries sediment with it. When the ice reaches the ocean, icebergs break off, ferrying their load of debris to the sea.


more interested acees the link
https://phys.org/news/2019-03-scientists-iceberg-alley-antarctica.html
----
2.Antarctic snowfall dominated by a few extreme snowstorms

Understanding the significance of these events is critical for scientists interpreting Antarctica's past, as well as predicting how our climate may 

BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY
     
A new study reveals the importance of a small number of intense storms around Antarctica in controlling the amount of snow falling across the continent.

Published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, the study analysed daily Antarctic snowfall data starting in the 1970s. It reveals how the most extreme 10% of snowfall events account for up to 60% of annual snowfall in some places, and are the result of a few large storms that develop over the Southern Ocean.

more interested acees the link
 https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-03/bas-asd032519.php

3. Connecting the Southern Ocean with Clouds

ACE-DATA/Antarctic Sea-Atmosphere Interactions Data (ASAID) Workshop; 5–6 November 2018, Lausanne, Switzerland

With rising global pollution, characterizing the processes of a previously unpolluted world is becoming ever more challenging. In the Antarctic and the surrounding Southern Ocean, we still find the cleanest seas and atmosphere on Earth. This makes it a particularly suitable place to investigate fundamental processes of ocean-atmosphere interactions in an almost pristine place. However, existing research in the Southern Ocean is mostly regional, making it difficult to generalize across the whole area.

he Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition (ACE), organized in 2016–2017 by the Swiss Polar Institute, represents the first foray into linking the islands, the surrounding ocean, and the Antarctic continent. The wide range of marine, terrestrial, and atmospheric measurements collected by the 22 projects on board is helping to establish baselines for many variables across the different regions. The data also provide valuable input for Earth system models.
The ACE–Delivering Added Value to Antarctica (ACE-DATA) project is a joint effort of domain scientists and the Swiss Data Science Center aiming to exploit this cross-disciplinary data set. As part of this effort, scientists involved with seven ACE projects met in Lausanne, Switzerland, in November 2018 to discuss the Southern Ocean's complex interactions between sea state, phytoplankton, trace gases, aerosols, and clouds. This is of particular importance because global climate models still fail to reproduce the cloud coverage over the Southern Ocean, resulting in a poor representation of the energy balance. This effect, in turn, has repercussions for simulations of sea ice extent, latitudinal energy transport, and sea surface temperature.

more interested acees the link

https://eos.org/meeting-reports/connecting-the-southern-ocean-with-clouds


--
Shramik Maruti Patil
DST INSPIRE FACULTY
ESSO-NCPOR
Ministry of Earth Science (MoES)
Headland Sada,
Vasco-Da-Gama,
Goa-403804
India

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[IPRNmail] 2504 LATEST ANTARCTIC UPDATES



1. Russian, Chinese scientists plan joint Arctic, Antarctic studies

Russia and China will have a joint symposium on March 25 - the first event in a series of meetings the scientists have scheduled
Share
MOSCOW, March 25. /TASS/. Russian and Chinese scientists will organize joint studies of the Arctic and Antarctic, they will explore mineral and biology resources in the global ocean, the Russian Academy of Sciences' Vice President Andrey Adrianov told TASS after the first meeting between representatives of the Russian and Chinese Academies of Sciences in Beijing on Sunday.

"Today, representatives of the Russian and Chinese Academies of Sciences had a meeting, which also featured directors of China's several ocean studies institutes," he said. "We have agreed to expand geography of our cooperation."

"Presently, we cooperate in the ocean's north-western area, and the Chinese experts are interested in taking part in our Arctic studies, they are also interested in joint studies of the Antarctic," he continued. "We have agreed to exchange experience in research and in search for underwater mineral and biology resources, in equipment for that work, including deep submersibles."

"We have also agreed to have joint Arctic expeditions with Chinese experts," he added.

Russia and China will have a joint symposium on March 25 - the first event in a series of meetings the scientists have scheduled.

"It will focus on deep research in the global ocean, and we shall discuss also means to control the global ocean - satellite technologies, space monitoring of natural hazards in the ocean, control of the ocean surface, including the upper water layers, and, of course, the deep ocean," the scientist said.
The visit's schedule

Representatives of the Russian and Chinese Academies of Sciences on Monday and Tuesday at a joint symposium on the global ocean's deep studies will share information and experience, will discuss scientific cooperation in research of the planet's water resources.

During the working trip, which will continue to March 30, experts of the Russian Academy of Sciences will visit the Chinese Academy's Institute of Neuroscience (ION), the Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics, the National Center for Protein Science, the Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, the ShanghaiTech University, and the Shanghai World Financial Center.

http://tass.com/economy/1050272

2. Diving to new depths for Antarctic science

A University of Canterbury scientist is using Kiwi technology in her Antarctic research to capture fascinating footage of life beneath the surface in McMurdo Sound.
This year, as part of her research into the Ross Sea region Marine Protected Area, Gateway Antarctica scientist Dr. Regina Eisert partnered with Boxfish Research to study Type-C killer whales with a new kind of remotely operated vehicle (ROV).
The stunning footage is just a snippet of what was recorded during 21 hours underwater this season. It includes, Adélie penguins, whales, Weddell seals, bright red octopus and a glowing ctenophore.
A University of Canterbury marine mammal expert, Dr. Eisert says the technology is a game changer for marine science, being safer and having a wider scope than scuba divers.
"Before this, I feel that my view of marine animals was quite biased, we would observe penguins waddling along and seals sleeping on the ice and whales on the surface, but they spend most of their lives in the water and this is the important stuff to see.
"We got confirmation of the overlap between penguins and Type-C killer whales, the ROV captured unconcerned penguins freely entering and exiting the water in the presence of theses whales, and being ignored by them" she says.
The Boxfish ROV carried out 15 dives, gathered 21 hours of footage and reached depths of 210 metres this season.

Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2019-03-depths-antarctic-science.html#jCp
LINK
https://phys.org/news/2019-03-depths-antarctic-science.html
------------------
3.environment
A mission to unfreeze Antarctica's secrets
For all the staggering sights of Antarctica - the vast white wilderness and its unique wildlife; summer days with no end - it is the sounds of the frozen continent that remain with Harry Seagar.

It was the commotion of the wind in particular that struck the Blake Ambassador. Antarctica is, after all, the windiest continent on the planet.

Soon after he arrived on the ice, Seagar was compelled to capture the wind, as it howled and whistled through the Antarctic Field Training camp - polar tents pitched in sea ice where newbies to Scott Base live for the first two days of their expedition.

"It was 2am and everyone else had gone to bed, but I was too overwhelmed by everything," the 21-year-old says. "It was blowing a gale outside, and snowing - a white-out - when suddenly I realised where on Earth I was, and it hit me like a slap in the face.

"So I took my recorder outside and taped the wind. It's one of the most relaxing sounds I've ever heard. A truly beautiful sound."  

And it's the sound that Seagar has used to start his podcast, Antarctica Unfrozen, to "get people in a zen zone, ready to take it all in".

What Seagar wants listeners to absorb is the simplified science around the icy
LINK..
tps://www.newsroom.co.nz/2019/03/25/501099/the-mission-to-unfreeze-antarcticas-secrets

4. Antarctica Unfrozen, a podcast series
A young Cantabrian is hoping to unfreeze Antarctic science mystery with a new podcast series.

Antarctica Unfrozen, created by 21-year-old Blake Antarctic Ambassador Harry Seagar, launches today.

In February he spent 11 days in Antarctica hosted by Antarctica New Zealand.

Seagar says he's hoping his podcasts will inspire everyday people to have a conversation about the environment.

"I'm just your average Joe who knows a little about Antarctica and cares about climate change, I want to share that with the world and keep a conversation going."

The podcast has 10 different episodes covering a range of topics from climate change, to wildlife and living at Scott Base.

"The episodes are conversation style, I'm asking these amazingly passionate people why they are excited about Antarctica and how we can get others passionate about the environment as well," he says.

LINK
ww.scoop.co.nz/stories/CU1903/S00299/antarctica-unfrozen-a-podcast-series.htm


--
Shramik Maruti Patil
DST INSPIRE FACULTY
ESSO-NCPOR
Ministry of Earth Science (MoES)
Headland Sada,
Vasco-Da-Gama,
Goa-403804
India

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