On International Women’s Day, 8 March 2021, we mark and celebrate the women working as part of the International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC).
Koellner 2019 515:200-208
Koellner, S., B. R. Parizek, R. B. Alley, A. Muto, and N. Holschuh. 2019. The impact of spatially-variable basal properties on outlet glacier flow. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 515: 200-208.
Alley 2019 60(80): 1-13
Alley, R., K. Cuffey, and L. Zoet. 2019. Glacial erosion: Status and outlook. Annals of Glaciology 60(80): 1-13.
Post 2019 5:12
Post, E., R. B. Alley, T. R. Christensen, M. Macias-Fauria, B. C. Forbes, M. N. Gooseff, A Iler, J. T. Kerby, K. L. Laidre, M. E. Mann, J. Olofsson, J. C. Stroeve, F. Ulmer, R. A. Virginia, and M. Wang. 2019. The polar regions in a 2°C warmer world. Science Advances 5:12.
Riverman 2019 60(80): 91-99
Riverman, K., S. Anandakrishnan, R. Alley, N. Holschuh, C. Dow, A. Muto, B. Parizek, K. Christianson, and L. Peters. 2019. Wet subglacial bedforms of the NE Greenland Ice Stream shear margins. Annals of Glaciology 60(80), 91-99.
Holschuh 2020 48 (3): 268-272
Holschuh, N., K. Christianson, J. Paden, R.B. Alley, and S. Anandakrishnan. 2020. Linking postglacial landscapes to glacier dynamics using swath radar at Thwaites Glacier, Antarctica. Geology 48 (3): 268–272.
Hoffman 2020: 14, 4603-4609
Hoffman, A. O., K. Christianson, D. Shapero, B. E. Smith, and I. Joughin. 2020. Brief communication: Heterogenous thinning and subglacial lake activity on Thwaites Glacier, West Antarctica. The Cryosphere 14, 4603–4609.
Alley 2019 363:342-344
Alley, R. B., K. A. Emanuel, and F. Zhang. 2019. Advances in weather prediction. Science 363: 342-344.
Zoet 47, e2020GL088964
Zoet, L. K., M. J. Ikari, R. B. Alley, C. Marone, S. Anandakrishnan, B. M. Carpenter, et al. 2020. Application of constitutive friction laws to glacier seismicity. Geophysical Research Letters, 47, e2020GL088964.
In the era of the covid pandemic, theaters are dark and empty, actors at home, patrons unable to support plays. But a collaboration between the Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company and a University of Colorado Boulder research institute worked to change that. Their result was Science Shorts, four fictitious, 10-minute plays that were written and produced by a group of four scientists partnering with four playwrights from Colorado, followed by four short talks by the scientists who inspired their work.