ICTP is pleased to announce that the forthcoming
ICTP Colloquium, "From water molecules to climate,
making sense of Greenland and Antarctic ice core
records", by Dr. Valérie Masson-Delmotte, will take
place TODAY at 16:30 hrs, in the Budinich
Lecture Hall, Leonardo Building, ICTP.
BIOSKETCH: Dr. Valérie Masson-Delmotte is a senior
scientist from Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et
de l'Environnement, Institut Pierre Simon Laplace,
Université Paris Saclay / CEA / CNRS, France. She is
the Co-chair of IPCC Working Group I for the AR6
cycle. Her research interests are focused on
quantifying and understanding past changes in climate
and atmospheric water cycle, using analyses from ice
cores in Greenland, Antarctica and Tibet, analyses
from tree-rings as well as present-day monitoring, and
climate modelling for the past and the future. She has
worked on issues such as the North Atlantic
Oscillation, drought, climate response to volcanic
eruptions, polar amplification, climate feedbacks,
abrupt climate change and ice sheet vulnerability
accross different timescales. She is active in
outreach for children and for the general public and
has contributed to several books on climate change
issues (e.g. Greenland, climate, ecology and society,
CNRS editions, 2016; in French). Her research was
recognized by several prizes (European Union Descartes
Prize for the EPICA project, 2008; Women scientist
Irène Joliot Curie Prize, 2013; Tinker-Muse Prize for
science and policy in Antarctica, 2015; Highly Cited
Researcher since 2014).
ABSTRACT: Ice cores provide a wealth of insights into
past climatic and environmental changes. Obtaining
information on past polar temperature changes is
important to document climate variations beyond scarce
instrumental records, and to test our quantitative
understanding of past climate variations. Water stable
isotope ratios in ice core records have commonly been
used as qualitative proxies for past changes in polar
temperature and moisture source characteristics, but
extracting quantitative signals is a major challenge.
Initially, spatial relationships between surface snow
isotopic composition and surface temperature were used
to establish a modern "isotopic thermometer".
Simulations performed with climate models equipped
with water stable isotopes were subsequently used to
assess the validity of this "isotopic thermometer
calibration" for different climate states (e.g.
glacial, interglacial), assuming that the ice core
signal is a precipitation weighted deposition record.
More information is available at http://indico.ictp.it/event/8477/
The Colloquium will be livestreamed at http://video.ictp.it/livestream
The poster is attached.
Light refreshments will be served after the lecture.
You are all very warmly invited to attend.
Office of the Director, ICTP. SAVE THE DATE: 24 May Colloquium at ICTP by Kip S. Thorne.