LandSense
Pushing the boundaries of Critical Zone research: Unravelling hydrological controls on carbon and nutrient fluxes by integrating proximal sensing, field measurements and smart modelling (LandSense), ARC, 2021-2026
Pushing the boundaries of Critical Zone research: Unravelling hydrological controls on carbon and nutrient fluxes by integrating proximal sensing, field measurements and smart modelling (LandSense), ARC, 2021-2026
The WeThaw team is monitoring the shoulder period in Abisko, and the mission has been covered in the media: RTBF web article 10/11/21 & La première and Vivacité – Radio JT du 10/11/21 Journal télévisé RTL – 13H et 19H on 11/11/21, and RTL info – Web article du 11/11/21 DH net– Web du 11/11/21, Read more about September 2021- Departure to Abisko for the WeThaw team for a 2-month monitoring[…]
Presentations by Maëlle Villani, Elisabeth Mauclet, Justin Louis and Alexia Gilliot at the Geologica Belgica conference in Tervuren, Belgium
Release of the last IPCC report AR6 with the recent updates on the cryosphere and permafrost
Public Selection for Oral Presentation on Wednesday, May 26 for François Gaspard with his presentation on “Waters in hydrothermal and polar environments: further developments for silicon isotope measurements” at the ELI Day conference at UCLouvain.
The five members of the WeThaw project participate to the AGU conference online. Monhonval et al., C012-0008Hirst et al., B120-11Mauclet et al., B123-03Thomas et al., C018-07Opfergelt et al., B028-10
On 9th November 2020, François Gaspard has defended publically his PhD thesis on “Controls on weathering fluxes from hydrothermally-active volcanic regions ».
Seminar at UCLouvain on March 2nd – Deep permafrost carbon pools and their vulnerability to mobilization
The WeThaw team participates to the Arctic week in Paris to explain the advances of the project to a broader audience, and to meet with the French scientific network INPEC (Interdisciplinary Network on Permafrost Ecosystems).
Returned from Alaska, the WeThaw team present the permafrost core samples and explain their first observations (press release on RTBF after fieldwork).