- Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, University of Queensland, Australia
www.Climate-Conference.com -
Ove Hoegh-Guldberg is Professor and Director of the Centre for Marine Studies at the University of Queensland. He completed his BSc. Hons at the University of Sydney and PhD at UCLA in 1989, and was recognized in 1999 with the Eureka prize for Research into the physiological mechanisms of coral bleaching. Specialising in the impact of climate change on biological systems, Ove has worked in polar, temperate and tropical regions, and is well-known for his work on the impacts of ocean warming and acidification on coral reefs. He is currently a Queensland Smart State Premier’s fellow, and holds positions as reviewing editor at Science Magazine and chair of the World Bank/GEF working group on coral reefs and climate change.
Author Archive for admin
8-10 July 2010
The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
www.Climate-Conference.com
The first issue of the new Journal, The International Journal of Climate Change: Impacts and Responses, has now been published.
Volume 1, Issue 1 contains
- Making Matters Worse: How FEMA Endangers People and Hampers Efforts to Address Climate Change by Jason Scorse.
- “Alleviating the Climate Change Crisis through a Middle Way of Life” by Danuse Murty.
- Characterization of Water Vapour Variability Based on GPS Sensing by Wayan Suparta, Mohd. Alauddin Mohd. Ali and Baharudin Yatim.
- Effect of Climate Change on the Yield of Winter Wheat in West Midnapore, India by S. J. Patil, R. K. Panda and S. Nandgude.
- Remote Sensing: An Attractive Tool for Monitoring Pollution by Anshu Gupta, Vivek Dey and Aditya Goel.
- Evaluating the Impact of Transdisciplinary Problem-based Learning on Student Attitude to Design and the Environment by Graham John Brewer and Thayaparan Gajendran.
- Literary Responses to Climate Change by Jennifer Michaels.
- The Implications of Climate Vulnerability for North Korean Regime Stability by Benjamin Luke Habib.
- Impact of Climate Change on the Growing Seasons in Select Cities of North Dakota, United States of America by Ambika Badh, Adnan Akyuz, Gary Vocke and Barbara Mullins.
- Sacred Groves: The Last Man-Made Carbon Sink by Khuraijam Jibankumar Singh.
“It comes as little surprise to discover that Christopher Ottersbach is inspired by Star Wars. His spectacular Aelous project, a vision which calls to mind the Surrealists, is a vehicle run by helium which allows its passengers to float just above the surface of the earth, and certainly has sci-fi leanings in its execution. Moved like a balloon by the wind, it can stay afloat for two weeks, is environmentally friendly, and has an arresting aerodynamic form.” – Wallpaper Magazine
You can read more about this project on the Wallpaper Magazine website here.
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