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Department of Geography & Environment

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Department of Geography & Environment Speaker Series

The Department of Geography & Environment hosts a series of guests, faculty members, and graduate students/post-docs who speak on current topics and issues in (or related to) human and physical geography.

The next talk is: Nutrien and a sustainable agri-food supply chain with Mike Nemeth

Download poster.

Join alumus Mike Nemeth as he provides an introduction and background to his current role at Nutrien. He will bring you an overview of Nutrien-who we are, and what we do. Micheal will focus on environmental aspects of sustainable agriculture and leading local and Canadian examples of sustainability in the agri-food supply chain.

Guest Speaker: Mike Nemeth
Day/Date: Friday, Oct 29, 2021 (via Zoom)
Time: 3:15 - 4:30 p.m.

Join Zoom Meeting:
Everyone is welcome. Free Admission.
For further information, contact the 免费福利资源在线看片 of Lethbridge at 403-329-2225

This lecture is made possible through an endowment established by donations from the Lethbridge Historical Society and Friends of Alex Johnston.

Image
Mike Nemeth

Previous speakers and topics:

Various classification systems have been developed to evaluate and understand the effects of human activity on local landscapes. The Reference Condition Approach (RCA) is used to assess aquatic systems. It determines whether or not the condition of a test site is 鈥榓cceptable鈥 in comparison to least-disturbed (reference) locations having similar natural environmental features. However, human activity is so pervasive that few true reference areas exist. Furthermore, there is no basis for assessing the relative condition of locations that are clearly 'nonreference'. One solution is to use the complementary concept of 'degraded condition', and assess the population of 鈥榤ost disturbed鈥 locations (areas whose environmental characteristics are deemed unacceptable by consensus). Identifying the two extremes allows one to ordinate the condition of test sites along a reference-degraded continuum (RDC). One can then model biological community attributes (bioindicators) as a function of increasing disturbance. Community responses to anthropogenic stress are often nonlinear, and dramatic changes in composition can occur if a threshold of disturbance is exceeded. These patterns can be seen as discontinuities in the range of natural variation as well as changes in 鈥榓verage鈥 characteristics. I will illustrate use of the RDC approach for evaluating the biological condition of Great Lakes coastal wetlands and for assessing reclaimed wetlands in the Alberta Oil Sands.

Moabite and Ammonite are two of the most important languages of the ancient Levantine world. Inscriptions in these Iron Age languages reveal a great deal about writing and literacy, scribalism, religion, economics, agriculture, warfare, diplomacy, kings, and kingdoms in the ancient region that is part of modern Jordan. It is a stunning legacy and deserves enormous attention. Using some of the most recent high resolution images, this lecture will focus on a dozen of the most consequential of these ancient inscriptions, including reference as well to some of the scholars whose work is the most foundational for the study of these inscriptions, namely, W.F. Albright, Frank Moore Cross, and Walter Aufrecht.

This presentation will demonstrate applications in environmental modelling and community-based monitoring. The intention of the talk is to provide an overview of past and current work of the presenter, for the purposes of finding common points of interest with the Department of Geography. On the topic of environmental modelling, simulations of land use change and hydrology will be presented, with a focus on the use of models as exploratory virtual labs with stakeholders using 3D technologies. On the topic of community-based monitoring, a current project will be presented with opportunities to explore department contributions.

Co-sponsored by the Department of Geography & Environment and Women and Gender Studies

The Crown, its honour and its duties, are all inventions of British and Canadian law. They are best understood in their specific historical-geographic context, particularly settler-colonialism. They emerged for strategic purposes and are not universal concepts, even among settler societies formerly part of the British Empire. Imperial actors employed legal discourse to secure geography, to render the Crown鈥檚 largely unpracticed and abstract claims more real. This assertion was, and continues to be, challenged by pre-existing Aboriginal political geographies. In its efforts to address these tensions in cases of Aboriginal title and rights claims, the Court makes use of the Crown, its honour and duties, but avoids fundamental questions of political geography, most notably in the recent decision of Mikisew Cree (2018). The unresolved point of tension in Mikisew Cree and other cases is the origin and legitimacy of the Crown鈥檚 assertion of territorial sovereignty. Through a geographic critique of the legal history of Aboriginal title, this presentation will argue that in the context of settler colonialism in Canada, 鈥渢he Crown鈥 is a land claim and should be treated as such.

This seminar presentation will address the need for FireSmart vegetation management research and showcase some of the work being done in Alberta and beyond. We will begin with a primer about wildfire basics and how vegetation affects the way wildfires spread. This discussion will include models that are used to forecast wildfire spread and intensity. We will show that vegetation management is one way that wildfire and land managers can mitigate the risk of unwanted wildfires.

Vegetation management is a long established practice by many First Nations, primarily through the use of prescribed fire. In today鈥檚 era wildland landscapes encompass many permanent communities that are dependant on resource based industries. Prescribed fire is still used as a hazard reduction tool, but other tactics are also needed. The establishment of 鈥渘ewer鈥 FireSmart vegetation management tools has to date been largely based on the knowledge of wildfire managers gained from wildfire suppression experience.However knowledge gained from wildfire observations does not translate into a thorough understanding of current FireSmart vegetation management effectiveness. In response Alberta and partner agencies have established a research program to evaluate vegetation management effectiveness. Examples of results to date, on-going work and opportunities for new work will be discussed.

There is growing concern that climate change will cause large scale migration and population displacements in the coming decades. Professor McLeman reviews existing knowledge of climate-migration processes and identifies key uncertainties and challenges in planning for the population impacts of climate change. The presentation draws upon examples from drought migration on the Great Plains, sea level rise in coastal areas, and scenarios of future migration responses. Also included is a brief summary of how migration, displacement and conflict is being assessed in the ongoing IPCC 6th Assessment Report process.

Dr. Robert McLeman is Professor of Geography and Environmental Studies at Wilfrid Laurier 免费福利资源在线看片 and a Coordinating Lead Author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. He has spent the last fifteen years researching the impacts of drought and other climatic hazards on migration and settlement patterns on the Great Plains.

Dr. Hester Jiskoot is a keen glaciologist and a keen sailor. In summer 2019, she combined the two passions during the successful attempt of the Tecla, a historic two-mast sailing ship, to traverse the Northwest Passage from Ilulissat, West Greenland, to Nome, Alaska. After crossing Baffin Bay, the ship continued along the inlets, sounds and straits of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago to the Beaufort Sea, Chukchi Sea and Bering Strait. The vessel moored in the settlement harbours of Pond Inlet, Taloyoak, Gjoa Haven, Cambridge Bay and Herschel Island. Tecla鈥檚 crew also made landings at remote beaches, including on Disko Island, Beechey Island, and at Kugluktuk and Tuktoyaktuk Peninsula. The final landing was at the infamous Alaska Gold Rush town of Nome.

In this visually stunning presentation, Hester will share the crew鈥檚 onboard experiences and take you on shore outings. You will see Arctic seascapes and landscapes adorned with northern lights, icebergs, sea ice and glaciers. There will be navigational hazards, pingos and thawing permafrost cliffs. There will be lichens, willows, whales, birds and musk oxen. Together, we will meet some of the characters and cultures in Arctic settlements, travel to historical sites related to Franklin鈥檚 and Amundsen鈥檚 expeditions, see (abandoned) stations of various kinds and find flakes of gold. Hester will also share some of her scientific observations of weather, clouds and sea surface temperature, and discuss a colleague鈥檚 beach observations of plastic and marine litter.

Guest Speaker: Rosalyn La Pier
Day/Date: Thursday, November 19, 2020 (via Zoom)
Time: 7:00 p.m.

From the Mountains to the Sea: Organic matter cycling in aquatic networks

Agriculturalization, urbanization, and climate warming all have profound impacts on our natural aquatic environments. Important to understanding the impacts of these changes is how the carbon cycle is responding to human induced changes. Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is a complex mixture of organic molecules found in all aquatic environments and is an important piece of the carbon cycle. Changes in DOM provide us with an opportunity to better understand how a variety of mechanisms impact the carbon cycle. The composition of DOM is a chemical fingerprint of the sources of carbon in aquatic systems since different sources impart unique chemical signatures on the DOM. Across environments, from isolated Arctic lakes to the heavily agriculturalized grassland rivers in Southern Alberta, the composition of DOM can indicate how these systems are responding to human changes. My research uses techniques that detect specific chemical fingerprints of the DOM, which helps to track changes in the aquatic carbon cycle across diverse environments and gradients of human impact. Here I will present updated estimates DOM flow and composition from rivers in Alaska, Russia, and Alberta draining a variety of land cover types and human impacts, and how chemical changes in DOM composition can help explain the factors controlling this movement of carbon

Last years speakers and topics included:

  • Dr. Ivan Townshend (免费福利资源在线看片 of Lethbridge): Changing segregation dynamics of two vulnerable populations in the "Divided City"
  • Dr. Melanee Thomas (免费福利资源在线看片 of Calgary): Natural disasters and district power: How political scientists think about electoral effects of place
  • Dr. Scott Lamoureux (Queen's 免费福利资源在线看片): Hydrological and limnological impacts of changing permafrost in the High Arctic
  • Alberta Wilderness Association: Wilderness Roadshow - Alberta's Public Lands and Wild Spaces
  • Dr. Michael Byers (免费福利资源在线看片 of British Columbia): Elon Musk, President of Mars?
  • Department of Geography Graduate student presentation of thesis proposals
  • Dr. Katharina Koch (免费福利资源在线看片 of Calgary): The Geopolitical Production of Trust Discourses at the Finnish-Russian Border

Alex Johnston Lecture Series

Also co-sponsored/organized by the Departments of History and Geography & Environment is the annual Dr. Alex Johnston Lecture Series.

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