Of Ice and Men

Earth and Environmental Sciences; First Place; Copyright 2014, Hilary Dugan. Used with permission. For more information, contact the Graduate College at gradcoll@uic.edu Antarctic lakes are studied as sentinels of future change, for climate records contained in their sediments, and as habitats for t...

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Main Author: Dugan, Hilary
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10027/23594
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spelling ftunivillchic:oai:dspace-prod.lib.uic.edu:10027/23594 2023-05-15T13:03:43+02:00 Of Ice and Men Dugan, Hilary 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10027/23594 en eng The Image of Research 2014; 2014 ftunivillchic 2019-08-02T22:06:33Z Earth and Environmental Sciences; First Place; Copyright 2014, Hilary Dugan. Used with permission. For more information, contact the Graduate College at gradcoll@uic.edu Antarctic lakes are studied as sentinels of future change, for climate records contained in their sediments, and as habitats for the simple food webs that can exist in inhospitable environments. Understanding how lakes are formed and are sustained in response to landscape conditions is critical in addressing the aforementioned research themes. The hypothesis of my doctoral research is that lake ice can be used to reveal past climatic changes, and further our awareness of current changes in climate and water loss in Antarctica. I use geophysical techniques and long-term field measurements to quantify water balance and interpret the history of thick perennially ice covered lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica. This photo of Lake Miers and Adams Glacier in Miers Valley, Antarctica, encapsulates how lake ice (foreground) is the end of the water cycle, which once began as a glacier (background). In the image, your eye is drawn to the far-away glacier. When I look at the grandeur and beauty of a glacier, I find it difficult to forget the toll climate change has taken on these bodies of ice worldwide. Ice holds many secrets of the past, and will play an important role in our future. This exhibit competition is organized by the University of Illinois at Chicago Graduate College and the University Library. Other/Unknown Material Adams Glacier Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica McMurdo Dry Valleys University of Illinois at Chicago: UIC INDIGO (INtellectual property in DIGital form available online in an Open environment) Adams Glacier ENVELOPE(-74.412,-74.412,81.630,81.630) Antarctic Lake Miers ENVELOPE(-60.450,-60.450,-62.717,-62.717) McMurdo Dry Valleys Miers ENVELOPE(163.850,163.850,-78.100,-78.100) Miers Valley ENVELOPE(164.200,164.200,-78.100,-78.100)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Illinois at Chicago: UIC INDIGO (INtellectual property in DIGital form available online in an Open environment)
op_collection_id ftunivillchic
language English
description Earth and Environmental Sciences; First Place; Copyright 2014, Hilary Dugan. Used with permission. For more information, contact the Graduate College at gradcoll@uic.edu Antarctic lakes are studied as sentinels of future change, for climate records contained in their sediments, and as habitats for the simple food webs that can exist in inhospitable environments. Understanding how lakes are formed and are sustained in response to landscape conditions is critical in addressing the aforementioned research themes. The hypothesis of my doctoral research is that lake ice can be used to reveal past climatic changes, and further our awareness of current changes in climate and water loss in Antarctica. I use geophysical techniques and long-term field measurements to quantify water balance and interpret the history of thick perennially ice covered lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica. This photo of Lake Miers and Adams Glacier in Miers Valley, Antarctica, encapsulates how lake ice (foreground) is the end of the water cycle, which once began as a glacier (background). In the image, your eye is drawn to the far-away glacier. When I look at the grandeur and beauty of a glacier, I find it difficult to forget the toll climate change has taken on these bodies of ice worldwide. Ice holds many secrets of the past, and will play an important role in our future. This exhibit competition is organized by the University of Illinois at Chicago Graduate College and the University Library.
author Dugan, Hilary
spellingShingle Dugan, Hilary
Of Ice and Men
author_facet Dugan, Hilary
author_sort Dugan, Hilary
title Of Ice and Men
title_short Of Ice and Men
title_full Of Ice and Men
title_fullStr Of Ice and Men
title_full_unstemmed Of Ice and Men
title_sort of ice and men
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10027/23594
long_lat ENVELOPE(-74.412,-74.412,81.630,81.630)
ENVELOPE(-60.450,-60.450,-62.717,-62.717)
ENVELOPE(163.850,163.850,-78.100,-78.100)
ENVELOPE(164.200,164.200,-78.100,-78.100)
geographic Adams Glacier
Antarctic
Lake Miers
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Miers
Miers Valley
geographic_facet Adams Glacier
Antarctic
Lake Miers
McMurdo Dry Valleys
Miers
Miers Valley
genre Adams Glacier
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
McMurdo Dry Valleys
genre_facet Adams Glacier
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
McMurdo Dry Valleys
op_relation The Image of Research 2014;
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