Congrats to Youngseob for an assistant professorship at UNC, Charlotte
Many congratulations to Qiang !
EPA-funded low-cost air pollution monitoring study.
An EPA-funded initiative to monitor air quality on the East Side of Buffalo. This project aims to help improve health outcomes in neighborhoods whose residents are more likely to suffer chronic, serious diseases.
Congrats to Youngseob for successfully defending his Ph.D.!
Dr. Youngseob Eum will be working as a postdoc fellow at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
You can make the Guinness Book of Records 2022 without being 8ft 11 in tall !!!
Who
Termite, Syntermes dirus
What
230,000 square kilometre(s)
Where
Brazil
Constructed over nearly 4,000 years and still occupied in parts to this day, a subterranean network of colonies in the caatinga scrubland of north-east Brazil that spans an area of 230,000 square kilometres (88,800 square miles) – larger than the island of Great Britain. The architects behind this megastructure are Syntermes dirus termites, the workers of which only measure about 1 centimetre (0.4 inches) long. The conglomeration (which is visible from space) is distinguished by some 200 million conical mounds (known locally as murundus) on the surface formed from waste dirt excavated from the tunnel systems beneath, each measuring around 2.5 metres (8 feet) tall and 9 metres (30 feet) in diameter. In total, the mounds are comprised of an estimated 10 cubic kilometres (2.4 cubic miles) of soil, which in terms of volume is equivalent to around 4,000 Great Pyramids of Giza.
The youngest of the mounds has been dated at 690 years and the oldest 3,820 years.
For context, the largest human city is the New York Metropolitan Area at 8,683 km2 (3,353 sq mi).
Martin, S.J., Funch, R.R., Hanson, P.R. and Yoo, E.H., 2018. A vast 4,000-year-old spatial pattern of termite mounds. Current Biology, 28(22), pp.R1292-R1293.
Climate change: Extreme heat linked to more mental health emergencies.
Medical News Today↪
The Temperature Toll
Yale Scientific ↪
AAG 2022 – Qiang entered finalist of John Odland student paper competition.
Congrats to Qiang who was selected as the finalist (10 out of 25) of the John Odland paper competition (the Spatial Analysis and Modeling specialty group ). His presentation is entitled: “A hybrid approach to estimate spatially and temporally resolved PM2.5 distributions from multi-sourced AOD data”. Time & Location: 1:40 – 1:55 PM, Feb. 25, 2022, Online.
Congratulations Youngseob! Dr. L. Michael Trapasso Award for Weather and Climate Impacts.
Youngseob Eum (GEOEH member, Ph.D. Candidate) was the recipient of the Dr. L. Michael Trapasso Award for Weather and Climate Impacts. The Dr. L. Michael Trapasso award is offered by the UB Department of Geography in order to advance the awardee’s research involving the use of meteorological or climatological data in the following year.