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Wednesday, January 19, 2022
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12:00 PM
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1:30 PM
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Walk-in Study Abroad Advising
- Location: International Programs Office LARTS 016
- Contact: International Programs Office
- Description: Have a quick question for a study abroad advisor? Would you like to start planning your study abroad experience? Drop by the IPO (LARTS 016) between Noon and 1:30. Students will be seen on a first-come, first-served basis.
- Topical Areas: Faculty, Staff and Administrators, Students, University Community, Study Abroad
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12:30 PM
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1:30 PM
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Department of Estuarine and Ocean Sciences Seminar - Dr. Ke Chen
- Location: > See description for location
- Contact: > See Description for contact information
- Description: The School for Marine Science and Technology
Department of Estuarine and Ocean Sciences
Seminar Announcement
"Eddies and wind drive a localized cross-shelf bottom intrusion"
Dr. Ke Chen
Physical Oceanography
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
12:30 pm to 1:30 pm
SMAST East Rooms 101/102
And Via Zoom
Abstract:
Observations and high-resolution numerical modeling are used to investigate the dynamical processes related to the initiation of an advective Marine Heatwave in the Middle Atlantic Bight of the Northwest Atlantic continental shelf. Both the observations and the model identify two significant cross-shelf intrusions in November 2016 and January 2017, with the latter inducing large-magnitude water mass anomalies across the shelf. Model prognostic fields reveal the importance of the combination of cyclonic eddies or ringlets and upwelling-favorable winds in producing the large-distance cross-shelf penetration and temperature/salinity anomalies. The cyclonic eddies in close proximity to the shelfbreak set up local along-isobath pressure gradients and provide favorable conditions for the intensification of the shelfbreak front, both processes driving cross-isobath intrusions of warm, salty offshore water onto the outer continental shelf. Subsequently, strong and persistent upwelling-favorable winds drive a rapid, bottom intensified cross-shelf penetration in January 2017 composed of the anomalous water mass from the cyclonic eddies. The along-shelf settings including realistic representation of bathymetric features are essential in the characteristics of the cross-shelf penetration. The results highlight the importance of smaller scale cyclonic eddies and the intricacy of the interplay between multiple processes to drive significant cross-shelf events.
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2021JC017927
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Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 974 4006 9270
Passcode: 428029
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Meeting ID: 974 4006 9270
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Meeting ID: 974 4006 9270
Passcode: 428029
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For additional information please contact Sue Silva at s1silva@umassd.edu
- Topical Areas: School for Marine Sciences and Technology, SMAST Seminar Series
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4:00 PM
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5:00 PM
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Financial Aid Help Labs
- Location: Claire T. Carney Library, Room 128
- Contact: > See Description for contact information
- Description: Financial Aid Services wants to remind all students to file their FAFSA! Join the Financial Aid Services Street Team for FA Help Labs on Wednesdays from 4 to 5 p.m. and Fridays from 4 to 5 p.m. in Library 128 for help filing your FAFSA and learning more about financial aid.
Contact Mark Yanni
myanni@umassd.edu
- Topical Areas: Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, Financial Aid
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6:00 PM
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7:30 PM
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That Chicken Show: The Weirdest Trivia Game Ever
- Location: Campus Center
- Contact: SAIL: Student Activities
- Description: Ready to show off your Trivia Prowess? Make sure you mark your calendars for the Weirdest Trivia Game Ever! Amazon Shopping Sprees for the winners! Free pizza
- Topical Areas: Students, Students, Graduate, Students, Law, Students, Undergraduate, Student Affairs, Week of Welcome
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10:00 AM
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12:00 PM
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Financial Aid In Person Visit
- Location: UMass Dartmouth Main Campus
, 285 Old Westport Road, Dartmouth, MA
- Contact: Admissions
- Description: Join us on a Campus tour, meet with an admissions counselor and while here, get the opportunity to meet with your financial aid counselor to learn more about your package award and answer any related questions that you have. Once you are done with the tour, be sure to inform your tour guide to drop you off at Financial aid.
- Link: https://www.umassd.edu/visit/
- Topical Areas: General Public, University Marketing, Undergraduate Admissions
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2:30 PM
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3:30 PM
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Department of Fisheries Oceanography Seminar Announcement - Dr. Roger Mann
- Location: > See description for location
- Contact: > See Description for contact information
- Description: The School for Marine Science and Technology
Department of Fisheries Oceanography
Seminar Announcement
"MANAGING FISHERIES IN A WORLD OF MOVING RESOURCE FOOTPRINTS AND COMPETING SOCIETAL NEEDS "
Dr. Roger Mann
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
2:30 pm to 3:30 pm
SMAST East, Rooms 101/102
Also Via Zoom
Abstract:
The continental shelf of the United States was once the preserve of commercial fishermen. This is no longer the case. The Exclusive Economic Zone is increasingly the focus of other economically powerful, sometimes incompatible uses including green energy, shipping, communications, mining, military exclusion zones, and conservation regions. These uses generally have fixed boundaries. The distribution of fished species moves in relation to warming of shelf waters, presenting challenges to both federal regional fishery management councils and industry alike.
Today’s presentation is about expanding your skills beyond that typically taught in a classical education of bachelor's and graduate degrees. It is about the challenge of communicating science with the world at large, and ensuring that sound science is included in decision making processes that shape societal needs, the economy and more. In this process it is important to realize that many of the things we teach you in graduate school may not easily translate into real world decision making -- where you may be asked for an opinion on a subject where you do not have definitive data. Should you proffer an opinion or stay quiet – the latter may insure you have no input to a discussion where it is unquestionably needed.
The context of the presentation is fishery management in the mid-Atlantic and New England regions. I will offer thoughts on how multiple, often competing uses for this regional footprint will influence fisheries management in coming years, and how YOU should prepare to represent science in these discussions.
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Zoom Link
https://umassd.zoom.us/j/93758230260?pwd=OHJ5UDloQkZZaCtXcTlBNlR6Qm0rQT09
Meeting ID: 937 5823 0260
Passcode: 426839
One tap mobile
+13017158592,,93758230260#,,,,*426839# US (Washington DC)
+13126266799,,93758230260#,,,,*426839# US (Chicago)
Dial by your location
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
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+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)
Find your local number: https://umassd.zoom.us/u/acosTPRs4V
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For additional information, please contact Sue Silva at s1silva@umassd.edu
- Topical Areas: School for Marine Sciences and Technology, SMAST Seminar Series
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