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February 2013


Director's Note

john robertsJohn Roberts

Welcome to February 2013. Unlike 2012 this is definitely the year for snow and Ice activities. But please be careful out there! As many of you know, Hank is recovering from the nasty spill he took while ice skating on Lake Mendota...more


Department News

Human Resources

This year, International Faculty & Staff Services (IFSS) will be presenting one hour trainings on a variety of immigration topics...more

Comings and Goings

Birthdays

 

replicate drill video

IDDO's Replicate Ice Coring Drill Provides Spectacular Footage (and a Gateway to Excellent Science)

Significant innovations by SSEC's Ice Drilling Design and Operations (IDDO) team on their state-of-the-art Replicate Coring System enable researchers to retrieve additional ice cores from specific depths...more

 

booth

SSEC/CIMSS Go Big in Texas

The renowned Austin, Texas, music scene was upstaged by the 93rd Annual AMS Annual Meeting held from 06 - 10 January 2013...more

 
tom and child

WeatherFest: Sparking the Future of Environmental Science

On Sunday, 06 January 2012, the day before the official opening of the AMS Convention, the 12th Annual WeatherFest science fair drew an excited crowd of weather enthusiasts, all eager to experience...more

 

ap class

Fostering STEM Careers and College Decisions

On  Thursday, 31 January 2013, students in an AP aviation course at Madison's Edgewood High School visited SSEC/CIMSS to learn more about some of the exciting research going on in our building...more

 

building

The wintry clouds drop spangles on the mountains. If the thing occurred once in a century historians would chronicle and poets would sing of the event; but Nature, prodigal of beauty, rains down her hexagonal ice-stars year by year, forming layers yards in thickness. The summer sun thaws and partially consolidates the mass. Each winter's fall is covered by that of the ensuing one, and thus the snow layer of each year has to sustain an annually augmented weight. It is more and more compacted by the pressure, and ends by being converted into the ice of a true glacier, which stretches its frozen tongue far down beyond the limits of perpetual snow. The glaciers move, and through valleys they move like rivers. 

John Tyndall