From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Wed Apr 1 13:10:08 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2020 17:10:08 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Reminder: Oceanography Dissertation Defense - Bryan Keller - April 2, 1:00p - Zoom meeting Message-ID: Join Zoom Meeting: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/328373041 Oceanography Seminar Bryan Keller PhD Oceanography Candidate TITLE: THE SPATIAL ECOLOGY OF THE BONNETHEAD, SPHYRNA TIBURO: MIGRATION, PARTURITION AND MAGNETIC-BASED NAVIGATION Major Professor: Dr. Dean Grubbs Date: Thursday April 2, 2020 Time: 1:00 PM Location: Zoom meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/328373041 ABSTRACT Elasmobranch fishes are a highly vagile group that often cross state, regional or international boundaries. Delineating migratory patterns that cross jurisdictional boundaries is essential for effective management, especially when confronted with fishing pressures that vary over space and time. In addition to migrating individuals, studying critical life stages, such as neonates, is important for fisheries management. These neonates can be essential for recruitment to adult populations and proper management should be a priority. We used passive acoustic telemetry to track the migrations of 44 bonnetheads, Sphyrna tiburo, a widely distributed small coastal shark in the western hemisphere. We monitored individuals for up to 1506 days across ~ 1070 km of Southeastern United States Atlantic coastline. The majority of these sharks exhibited strong site fidelity to the North Edisto River in South Carolina and returned annually, residing in the estuary from April to November. Climatic migrations then occurred and overwintering habitats were located throughout Georgia and mid-Florida waters. We present, for the first time to our knowledge, the interannual effects of climatic variation on the seasonal migrations of individual sharks. We found that interannual variations in sea surface temperature had significant effects on the migration distance, duration, and date of arrival to overwintering habitats of individual sharks. An electivity analysis suggested that overwintering locations are selected based upon thermal range and not physical location. Given the significant effects of sea surface temperature on migration, future migrations may be altered due to climate change and warming seas. The effect of shorter migrations or the overwintering presence of S. tiburo in more northerly habitats is unknown. Given the degree of site fidelity observed, our work also has robust implications for the management of this species, as animals with strong ties to specific locations are put at high risks of localized extirpation. The data generated from this study can be used to generate predictive models that can estimate migration/overwintering areas based upon sea surface temperature. These areas can then be protected during migration should the stock become imperiled. While monitoring the residency of S. tiburo in the North Edisto River we noticed a repeated absence of acoustic detections that aligned with the temporal span when parturition occurs. This absence from the NER suggested they may be giving birth outside of the estuarine waters. We used acoustic telemetry to track pregnant females and found they left the NER for ~2 weeks every year. During this time they underwent a gametic migration down the coast of the United States into the coastal waters of southern South Carolina and Georgia. We also analyzed fishery independent surveys and found neonates began to appear in nearshore trawls during this same time period. The mature females caught in these surveys also lost ~1 kg of total body weight from summer to early fall, which we suspect indicates a birthing event. A separate study on the same population of sharks identified that bonnetheads captured in mid-September were post-partum. Collectively these data illustrate that bonnetheads emigrate from the NER while pregnant, migrate down the coast, give birth and return to the NER where they stay until early November. These data are important for the management of the bonnethead because their primary source of mortality is the shrimp fishery, which has heavy spatial overlap in these nearshore waters, and a recent stock assessment suggested these trawlers could be contributing to heavy pressure on the bonnethead. Throughout the first two research chapters, we have identified that migration is common in marine animals. Bonnetheads from the North Edisto River were shown to migrate over 1,000 km and successfully return to a target location. In order for these movements to be possible, having a map sense may be important, and the earth's magnetic field appears to be an important component of this behavior for other taxa. Whilst sharks have been at the forefront of sensory physiology research on sensitivity to electromagnetic fields, whether they use Earth's magnetic field for navigation is controversial. Here we use a "magnetic displacement" experiment to show that sharks can use the map-like information from earth's magnetic field to orient. Bonnethead sharks captured along the panhandle of Florida and exposed to a southern field within their range in the Gulf of Mexico oriented homeward, whereas orientation was random when exposed to a northern field outside of their range (in the continental U.S.A.) and in a field that controlled for nonspecific effects of the testing procedure. Given that sharks could have experienced more southern magnetic fields than the test site, but never more northern fields, our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that sharks learn magnetic features for navigational tasks. The apparent ability of sharks to discriminate position using magnetic cues may also explain the sensory basis by which genetic structure of shark populations are maintained and how cryptic speciation can occur - despite no geographic barriers among reproductive locations. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Wed Apr 1 13:12:53 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2020 17:12:53 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Meteorology PhD Defense for Robert West, Thursday, April 2, 2020, 3:30 PM, Zoom meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/657801371 Message-ID: Join Zoom Meeting https://fsu.zoom.us/j/657801371 Meteorology Seminar Robert West PhD Meteorology Candidate Title: An evaluation of non-Gaussian climate statistics Major Professor: Dr. Philip Sura Date: Thursday April 2, 2020 Time: 3:30 PM Location: Zoom meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/657801371 ABSTRACT Earth's atmosphere-ocean system is distinguished by its variability over a wide range of time scales. The non-linear interactions between these time scales are complex and are further complicated by the large number of subsystems and modes in the atmosphere-ocean system. Here, we explore a stochastic model developed by Sardeshmukh and Sura which uses correlated additive and multiplicative (CAM) noise and relies on a state-dependent (multiplicative) noise forcing to represent the multi-scale interactions between weather and climate. An important problem in climate variability is the statistical representation of extreme weather and climate events. While a description of the tails of a probability density function (pdf) is essential for modeling extreme events, an understanding of the full pdf is required to capture the full dynamics of the atmosphere-ocean system. On daily scales, the statistics of the large-scale atmospheric circulation are non-Gaussian. A one-dimensional pdf produced by the CAM noise model, or stochastically generated skewed (SGS) distribution, attempts to probabilistically represent the non-Gaussian statistics of atmospheric climate anomalies. This study evaluates the ability of the SGS distribution to represent the of non-Gaussian statistics of several atmospheric variables using NOAA-CIRES-DOE Twentieth Century Reanalysis Project version 2c (20CRv2c) dataset. A method of moments SGS parameter estimation technique described Sardeshmukh et al (2015) is implemented in a Julia software package and applied to global gridded time series of reanalysis data. Goodness-of-fit tests show the SGS distribution performs well in regions of near-zero and positive kurtosis, but produces statistically implausible with time series with negative sample kurtosis. However, the SGS distribution is found to outperform the standard normal (Gaussian) distribution at nearly all gridded locations, even where the SGS fit is poor. The SGS distributions of two 67 year 20CRv2c periods are also compared, where few significant changes in the shape of the SGS distribution are found. Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Wed Apr 1 14:22:40 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2020 18:22:40 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] ***FEMINDER***Tomorrow***at 2PM*** GFDI/Department of Scientific Computing Graduate Student Seminar on Thursday, April 2, 2020 at 2:00PM via zoom In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: *****REMINDER*****REMINDER*****TOMORROW***THURS****4/2/20**at 2PM via zoom: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/352810092 If you don't have FSU account please use this ID to join the seminar: 352-810-092 ________________________________ From: Vijayalakshmi Challa Sent: Thursday, March 26, 2020 10:12 AM &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& & GFDI and Department of Scientific Computing Seminar & &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& TITLE: A method of fuel characterization for fire behavior models and the influence of fuel heterogeneity on fire spread. SPEAKER: Mr. Daniel Rosales Giron MS Graduate Candidate Department of Scientific Computing & GFD Fire Dynamics Program MAJOR PROFESSOR: Dr. Kevin Speer DATE & TIME: Thursday, April 2nd, 2020 at 2:00 PM Zoom Meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/352810092 &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& & DEFENSE FOLLOWS THE SEMINAR & &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& Abstract: High spatial variability has been observed in simple fuelbeds (Keane et al.2012, Hiers et al. 2009) which accentuates the need to describe the actual fuel arrangement and composition of fuels in a prescribed or wildfire operation setting as opposed to abstract representations, regardless of model application and domain size.Working with high resolution 3D datasets, I will apply TLS scan information of highly instrumented burn plots in Pebble Hill and Eglin Air Force Base to create voxelized data arrays containing bulk density and fuel height for surface fuels <1m on a horizontal resolution of 0.5 m2. This will be coupled with a common method to populate the environment with trees described in Linn et al. (2005), where fuel is assigned to voxels depending on tree inputs including tree location, height, height to live crown, crown radius, and crown concavity. Starting at the resolution of the fire grid on QUIC-Fire (2m), fuels will be aggregated, and characteristics will be calculated with resolutions of 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, and 32 m, as well as using a single fuel characteristic for the entire plot. I will then use QUIC-Fire under a full range of wind and dead fuel moisture conditions common to prescribed and wildland fires to represent potential ranges of fire intensity, since it is possible that fuel resolution is only relevant for fire intensities under a particular threshold of wind speed, moisture content, or some combination of each. These thresholds will be investigated using a suite of different metrics that have been developed to fully describe the fire environment. Some of these include the bulk rate of spread (analogous to perimeter growth rate), the reduced area, and the normalized canopy consumption, as well as more traditional metrics such as surface fuel consumption and max downwind spread rate. Using QUIC-Fire in an ensemble fashion will allow us to calculate a margin of error that?s considered acceptable for every run, and sensitivity to the fuel heterogeneity can then be tested -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Thu Apr 2 10:13:21 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Thu, 2 Apr 2020 14:13:21 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] TODAY's SEMINAR AND DEFENSE POSTPONED TILL SUMMER (GFDI/Department of Scientific Computing Graduate Student Seminar on Thursday, April 2, 2020 at 2:00PM via zoom) In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: TODAY'S GFDI&DSC seminar by Daniel Rosales Giron has been POSTPONED till Summer Semester. ________________________________ ***********NOTE: THIS SEMINAR AND DEFENSE HAS BEEN POSTPONED TILL SUMMER 2020 SEMESTER.************* ________________________________ From: Vijayalakshmi Challa Sent: Thursday, March 26, 2020 10:12 AM &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& & GFDI and Department of Scientific Computing Seminar & &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& TITLE: A method of fuel characterization for fire behavior models and the influence of fuel heterogeneity on fire spread. SPEAKER: Mr. Daniel Rosales Giron MS Graduate Candidate Department of Scientific Computing & GFD Fire Dynamics Program MAJOR PROFESSOR: Dr. Kevin Speer DATE & TIME: Thursday, April 2nd, 2020 at 2:00 PM Zoom Meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/352810092 &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& & DEFENSE FOLLOWS THE SEMINAR & &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& Abstract: High spatial variability has been observed in simple fuelbeds (Keane et al.2012, Hiers et al. 2009) which accentuates the need to describe the actual fuel arrangement and composition of fuels in a prescribed or wildfire operation setting as opposed to abstract representations, regardless of model application and domain size.Working with high resolution 3D datasets, I will apply TLS scan information of highly instrumented burn plots in Pebble Hill and Eglin Air Force Base to create voxelized data arrays containing bulk density and fuel height for surface fuels <1m on a horizontal resolution of 0.5 m2. This will be coupled with a common method to populate the environment with trees described in Linn et al. (2005), where fuel is assigned to voxels depending on tree inputs including tree location, height, height to live crown, crown radius, and crown concavity. Starting at the resolution of the fire grid on QUIC-Fire (2m), fuels will be aggregated, and characteristics will be calculated with resolutions of 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, and 32 m, as well as using a single fuel characteristic for the entire plot. I will then use QUIC-Fire under a full range of wind and dead fuel moisture conditions common to prescribed and wildland fires to represent potential ranges of fire intensity, since it is possible that fuel resolution is only relevant for fire intensities under a particular threshold of wind speed, moisture content, or some combination of each. These thresholds will be investigated using a suite of different metrics that have been developed to fully describe the fire environment. Some of these include the bulk rate of spread (analogous to perimeter growth rate), the reduced area, and the normalized canopy consumption, as well as more traditional metrics such as surface fuel consumption and max downwind spread rate. Using QUIC-Fire in an ensemble fashion will allow us to calculate a margin of error that?s considered acceptable for every run, and sensitivity to the fuel heterogeneity can then be tested -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Thu Apr 2 13:23:47 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Thu, 2 Apr 2020 17:23:47 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Meteorology PhD Defense for Robert West, Thursday, April 2, 2020, 3:30 PM, Zoom meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/657801371 Message-ID: Join Zoom Meeting https://fsu.zoom.us/j/657801371 Meteorology Seminar Robert West PhD Meteorology Candidate Title: An evaluation of non-Gaussian climate statistics Major Professor: Dr. Philip Sura Date: Thursday April 2, 2020 Time: 3:30 PM Location: Zoom meeting ID: https://fsu.zoom.us/j/657801371 ABSTRACT Earth's atmosphere-ocean system is distinguished by its variability over a wide range of time scales. The non-linear interactions between these time scales are complex and are further complicated by the large number of subsystems and modes in the atmosphere-ocean system. Here, we explore a stochastic model developed by Sardeshmukh and Sura which uses correlated additive and multiplicative (CAM) noise and relies on a state-dependent (multiplicative) noise forcing to represent the multi-scale interactions between weather and climate. An important problem in climate variability is the statistical representation of extreme weather and climate events. While a description of the tails of a probability density function (pdf) is essential for modeling extreme events, an understanding of the full pdf is required to capture the full dynamics of the atmosphere-ocean system. On daily scales, the statistics of the large-scale atmospheric circulation are non-Gaussian. A one-dimensional pdf produced by the CAM noise model, or stochastically generated skewed (SGS) distribution, attempts to probabilistically represent the non-Gaussian statistics of atmospheric climate anomalies. This study evaluates the ability of the SGS distribution to represent the of non-Gaussian statistics of several atmospheric variables using NOAA-CIRES-DOE Twentieth Century Reanalysis Project version 2c (20CRv2c) dataset. A method of moments SGS parameter estimation technique described Sardeshmukh et al (2015) is implemented in a Julia software package and applied to global gridded time series of reanalysis data. Goodness-of-fit tests show the SGS distribution performs well in regions of near-zero and positive kurtosis, but produces statistically implausible with time series with negative sample kurtosis. However, the SGS distribution is found to outperform the standard normal (Gaussian) distribution at nearly all gridded locations, even where the SGS fit is poor. The SGS distributions of two 67 year 20CRv2c periods are also compared, where few significant changes in the shape of the SGS distribution are found. Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Tue Apr 7 11:26:44 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Tue, 7 Apr 2020 15:26:44 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Reminder: Geology Thesis Defense - Kyle Compare - April 8, 10:30 - Zoom meeting (corrected meeting number) Message-ID: Title: Development and testing of an automated, in-situ groundwater seepage meter Major Professor: Ming Ye Online through Zoom https://fsu.zoom.us/j/836651754 (note corrected meeting number) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Wed Apr 8 10:34:16 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2020 14:34:16 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Honors Thesis - Matthew Smith - Today, 11:00 - Zoom meeting Message-ID: Topic: Honors Thesis Title: "Mixotrophy in Karenia brevis". Time: Apr 8, 2020 11:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meeting https://fsu.zoom.us/j/259748671 Meeting ID: 259 748 671 One tap mobile +16465588656,,259748671# US (New York) +13126266799,,259748671# US (Chicago) Dial by your location +1 646 558 8656 US (New York) +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago) +1 301 715 8592 US +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston) +1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose) +1 253 215 8782 US Meeting ID: 259 748 671 Find your local number: https://fsu.zoom.us/u/adPavNPkkU Join by Skype for Business https://fsu.zoom.us/skype/259748671 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Wed Apr 8 14:28:56 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2020 18:28:56 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Reminder: Geology Thesis Defense - Matthew Schreck - April 9, 10 am - Zoom meeting Message-ID: Zoom Meeting only - https://fsu.zoom.us/j/4574412558 Title: Geology of the Dadeville Complex in the Abbotsford 7.5' Quadrangle, Appalachian Inner Piedmont of Eastern Alabama and Western Georgia Major Professor: Jim Tull -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Mon Apr 13 11:18:18 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Mon, 13 Apr 2020 15:18:18 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Honors in the Major Defense for Justin Stow, Monday, April 13, 2020, 11:30 am, zoom meeting Message-ID: Good morning, Justin Stow will be presenting his Honors in the Major Defense this morning, Monday, April 13, 2020, 11:30 am. It is titled Analyzing Gaps and Hurricane Rain Cover to Aid in New NASA Satellite Proposal. The zoom meeting information is below. https://fsu.zoom.us/j/6294552919 Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Mon Apr 13 11:22:42 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Mon, 13 Apr 2020 15:22:42 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Correction to the zoom ID: Honors in the Major Defense for Justin Stow, Monday, April 13, 2020, 11:30 am, zoom meeting 94480919209 Message-ID: Sorry about the confusion, the correct meeting ID is 94480919209 Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Mon Apr 13 11:45:43 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Mon, 13 Apr 2020 15:45:43 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Correction to the zoom ID: Honors in the Major Defense for Justin Stow, Monday, April 13, 2020, 11:30 am, zoom meeting 94480919209 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Shel, I hope you are doing well. Regarding the latest security issues on Zoom, is it ok to keep posting the Zoom links or ID Meetings for seminars, defenses as events on Facebook? Thank you. Barbara ________________________________ From: Eoas-seminar on behalf of eoas-seminar--- via Eoas-seminar Sent: Monday, April 13, 2020 11:22 AM To: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Correction to the zoom ID: Honors in the Major Defense for Justin Stow, Monday, April 13, 2020, 11:30 am, zoom meeting 94480919209 Sorry about the confusion, the correct meeting ID is 94480919209 Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Thu Apr 16 11:11:39 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 15:11:39 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Honors in the Major Thesis defense for Victoria Clear, April 16, 4:00 PM, zoom meeting ID432517358 Message-ID: Good morning, Victoria Clear will be presenting her Honors in the Major Defense this afternoon, Thursday, April 16, 2020, 4:00 pm. It is titled "Analysis of Lightning Flash Densities over the City of Orlando, FL". The zoom meeting information is listed below. https://fsu.zoom.us/j/432517358 Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Thu Apr 16 14:31:30 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 18:31:30 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Honors in the Major Thesis defense by Anxhelo Agastra, Friday, April 17, 2020 at 10:00 am, zoom meeting Message-ID: Good morning, Anxhelo Agastra will be presenting his Honors in the Major Defense tomorrow morning, Friday, April 17, 2020, 10:00 am. It is titled "Forecasting Prescribed Fires using Weather Forecasts, Satellite Data, and Machine Learning". The zoom meeting information is listed below. https://fsu.zoom.us/j/96231079133 Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu Fri Apr 17 09:47:32 2020 From: eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu (eoas-seminar at lists.fsu.edu) Date: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 13:47:32 +0000 Subject: [Eoas-seminar] Honors in the Major Thesis defense by Anxhelo Agastra, Friday, April 17, 2020 at 10:00 am, zoom meeting NOTE New Zoom ID Message-ID: Good morning, Anxhelo Agastra will be presenting his Honors in the Major Defense this morning, Friday, April 17, 2020, 10:00 am. It is titled "Forecasting Prescribed Fires using Weather Forecasts, Satellite Data, and Machine Learning". NEW zoom meeting information is listed below. https://fsu.zoom.us/j/99211801991 Shel McGuire Florida State University Academic Program Specialist Department of Earth, Ocean, & Atmospheric Science 1011 Academic Way, 2019 EOA Building Tallahassee, FL 32306 850-644-8582 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: