News and Events
- UW-Madison Events Calendar
- Nelson Institute Events (IES)
- CPEP SPRING 2009 SEMINARS
- AOS talks this month
- WICCI 2009 Seminars
Recent News
Hurricanes not likely to disrupt ocean carbon balance:
New GRL paper authored by Koch, McKinley,Bennington and Ullman.Dust plays larger than expected role in determing Atlantic temperature:
The new paper is coauthored by Ralf Bennartz and Daniel Vimont of UW-Madison and Andrew Heidinger and James Kossin of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and UW-Madison.Announcing a new seminar series: WICCI (Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts): Bracing for impact: Climate Change Adaptation in Wisconsin.
February-June 2009 at 425 Henry Mall, auditorium room 1111, open to the public. Free parking in lot 20, WPT will be filming all lectures. Contact Dr. Mike Notaro (mnotaro@wisc.edu). WICCI 2009 Seminar ScheduleCCR scientists present climate change findings at American Geophysical Union meeting
Study: Did early climate impact divert a new glacial age? (Dec. 16, 2008).
It could be much colder...Jack Williams named Bryson Distinguished Professor
CCR and the CPEP program congratulate Dr. Jack Williams as the new Bryson Distinguished Professor, beginning Fall 2008.Reid Bryson - 1920-2008
Pioneer of climatology dies at 88- CCR releases interactive 20th and 21st Century IPCC Maps of select atmospheric variables for seasonal and annual averages.
CCR Staff News
-
Karl-Heinz Wyrwoll is visiting Madison while on sabbatical leave from the School of Earth and Geographical Sciences, The University of Western Australia. His research interests range from geomorphology-earth surface processes to Quaternary geology-paleoclimatology. Current projects include:
• The uplift-climate history of the northern margin of the Tibetan Plateau
• Late Quaternary paleohydrology and paleoclimates of western Australia
• Late Quaternary history of the northwest Australian monsoon
• Investigation of the relationship between the Australian and East Asian monsoon systems using Atmosphere Ocean Global Circulation Model simulations
• Prediction of eolian instability and dust transport under past and future climates -
In honor of John Kutzbach's
retirement, a Symposium was held 21-23 May 2004 at the J.F.
Friedrick Center on the shores of Lake Mendota, UW campus.
View Slideshow of photographs from the Symposium (21MB, slow to load!)
Download slideshow (right click, save as..)
Menu
About
Research
- Present Climate
- Future Climate
- Past Climate
- Ecosystems Climate
- Civilizations Climate
- Laboratories
- International Projects

