CEREO Newsletter- April 2015
julie.padowskiThe CEREO Newsletter for April 2015 is now available- you can view it here.
The CEREO Newsletter for April 2015 is now available- you can view it here.
CEREO is offering a Data Carpentry Workshop , the workshop will take a train-the-trainers approach so that trainees emerge from the multi-day workshop with some basic computing skills that will ease environmental research (e.g. how to get the data you want out of a data logger or big repository without crashing your desktop computer!) some of the trainees could possibly even receive additional preparation to become Carpentry instructors themselves.
These Workshops fill fast, so be sure to register soon.
Bustad Hall, Room 145, Washington State University
Starts Thursday, May 14, 2015 at 8:00am
Closes Friday. May 15, 2015 at 4:30 pm
Pacific Northwest Clean Water Association (PNCWA)
Deadline to apply: May 22, 2015
URL: http://www.pncwa.org/scholarship-program
***Change In Course Number***
Fall 2015. M, W, F 10:10-11. 3 credits. Lecture, no lab. Professor Steve Katz.
Questions? Contact Marlene Guse: mguse@wsu.edu
Pacific Northwest Clean Water Association (PNCWA)
Deadline to apply: May 22, 2015
URL: http://www.pncwa.org/scholarship-program
2015 Earth Monitoring Competition
Closing date is June 13th at www.copernicus-masters.com.
Questions? Contact Lara Schaflinger at lara.schaflinger@anwendungszentrum.de
Environmental Stewardship Scholarships
Deadline to apply: May 22, 2015
URL: http://www.pncwa.org/scholarship-program
***Change In Course Number***
ENVR_SCI 492 has been changed to ENVR_SCI 417: Fisheries Science and Management
Fall 2015. M, W, F 10:10-11. 3 credits. Lecture, no lab. Professor Steve Katz.
Questions? Contact Marlene Guse: mguse@wsu.edu
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Close Date: May 19, 2015
URL: http://www.epa.gov/ncer/rfa/2015/2015_gro_undergrad.html
Fall 2015
Lecture: Tu, Th 10:35
Lab: TU 1:35 – 4:00
Course Description: Students will learn to design, interpret, and critically evaluate the use of stable isotopic tools in biological studies. Specifically, we will focus on efficiently learning terminology and notation, sources of variation, mathematical models of isotope composition, and key applications of stable isotope techniques. The laboratory section of the course will provide hands-on experience with stable isotope mass spectrometers to train you to run your own samples.
For information contact Dr. R. Dave Evans (5-7466; rdevans@wsu.edu)