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Funding provided by:
Life Saves the Planet

Thaw & Freeze: The Ecological, Geological, and Human Stakes of a Warming Arctic

In partnership with:
Date and time
Monday, November 25, 2024
Virtual:

A rapidly changing Arctic is reshaping everything. Polar bears navigate shrinking expanses of sea ice, thawing permafrost threatens coastal villages, destabilizes infrastructure, and exhales methane, and warming temperatures push more species northward into a greener arctic. These transformations are profound, and their impacts can extend far beyond the region’s ecologies that depend on them.

What do these changes mean for wildlife, humans, and the climate? How is all of this going to play out in different regions and ecosystems around the world? Does understanding these changes and seeing them with your own eyes change the way you see everything else?

Join Biodiversity for a Livable Climate for a conversation that convenes story and science, writer and researcher to help shape our understanding of what this means for the Arctic, our climate and the webs of life that depend on both. Jon Waterman, writer for both Patagonia and NatGeo, and author of Into the Thaw, is by Dr. Flavio Lehner, Chief Climate Scientist at Polar Bears International—one a storyteller of the Arctic’s systems, the other a researcher of them.

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Jon Waterman found his calling as a writer while shooting photographs on expeditions more than four decades ago. He has shot and written television films, including “The Logan Challenge,” “Surviving Denali,” “Odyssey Among the Inuit,” “ANWR Trek," and "Chasing Water." Jon is known for his Northern explorations, detailed in many of his books and countless journals since 1978.
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Dr. Flavio Lehner is Polar Bears International’s Chief Climate Scientist. He is also an Assistant Professor in Earth and Atmospheric Science at Cornell University. He obtained a PhD in Climate Science from the University of Bern in Switzerland in 2013. His research group studies climate variability and change with a focus on physical processes that affect humans and ecosystems, from heatwaves and droughts to sea ice trends and precipitation extremes.

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