Down To Earth: A podcast for Geoscientists by Geoscientist
Science:Earth Sciences
Wetlands are the Earth’s greatest natural carbon stores, however, since 1900, we have lost 64% of our wetlands due to both human activity and climate change. Coastal wetlands and deltas–wetlands that form as rivers–are particularly vulnerable due to their position at the land-sea interface and many are, in fact, sinking. In this episode, we speak to Dr. Marc Simard about the crucial role of wetlands in climate regulation and adaptation. We also dig into his Delta-X project to look at how he and his team are combining remote sensing and in situ measurements to understand how the Mississippi River Delta is growing and sinking, and how we can apply this research to protecting deltas around the world.
S05E08 Down to Earth: Food Security
S05E07 Down to Earth: Water Resources
S05E06 Down to Earth: Sea Ice
S05E05 Down to Earth: Glaciers
S05E04 Down to Earth: Aerosols
S05E03 Down to Earth: Permafrost
S5E01 Down to Earth: Forest Ecosystems
Down to Earth: Season 5 Trailer
S4E10 Down to Earth: Training for culture change in Open Science
S4E09 Down to Earth: Getting the Green for Open Science
S4E08 Down to Earth: Demystifying the Scientific Process with Data Management, FAIR, and Science Communication
S4E07 Down to Earth: Artificial Intelligence: Boon or Bane for Open Science?
S4E06 Down to Earth: Breaking Barriers with Open Education and Open Peer Review
S4E05 Down to Earth: Making Open Source more Accessible: A GitHub Case Study
S4E04 Down to Earth: Pirate or Proprietary? The Solution in Open Source
S4E03 Down to Earth: Navigating Data Sovereignty in Open Science
S4E02 Down to Earth: Dealing with Data: Infrastructures and Standards
S4E01 Down to Earth: What is Open Science?
Down to Earth: Season 4 ”Open Science” Trailer
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Regenerative Agriculture Podcast
The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens
Kosmographia
Climate One
Forestcast