Inès Ollivier spent a year in Antarctica where she tended instruments that gives us an understanding on how snow accumulates into the massive ice sheet that we know as the Antarctic. Now she is well into her first year as a PhD-student in the EU-funded DEEPICE project. In this project they studies proxies in deep ice cores to understand the past climate dynamics in Antarctica.
Inès Ollivier is a PhD-student at the Geophysical institute, UoB, and a Bjerknes Centre researcher. Learn about her work together with our host Stephen Outten from Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center and co-host Ingjald Pilskog from Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.
Meike Becker og Ingunn Skjevlan - Deepwater acidification
Predicting algae blooms - a new tool in our arsenal
Not so green transition
Pacific islands in a rising ocean
The Breathing Ocean
We are very fond of mud! - paleoclimate with Eystein Jansen
How can we predict sea ice?
The One Ocean Expedition
The hunt for ancient DNA under the sea ice
Havbruk og klima: Frode Vikebø om hvordan fisk påvirkes av temperatur i havet
Fysikk og klima: Martin Fernø om hvordan (og hvorfor!) vi fanger og lagrer CO2
Energi og klima: Helge Drange om hvor lenge vi har visst om global oppvarming
Geovitenskap og klima: Kikki Kleiven om hva fortiden kan fortelle oss om fremtiden
Matematikk og klima: Marie Pontoppidan regner på regnet
The disappearance of water in the Nordic seas
AI flooding the flooding research
The climate cost of planting trees
Parisavtalen 5 år etter – med direktør Tore Furevik
Are we melting Antarctica irreversibly?
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