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First Name Last Name Email
Joan Townsend townsnd@cc.umanitoba.ca

Organization: University of Manitoba

Department: Department of Anthropology

Specialties: ethnohistory, religion/belief systems, Athabaskan studies

Current Research: Ethnohistorical studies along the Alaskan Pacific Rim and the relationships of the Russian-American Company with the Alaskan Pacific Rim peoples. Shamans and new religious movements, particularly core/neo-shamanism, new age and individuals in search of transcendence and healing. Ethnomedicine.

Jack Townshend townshend@usgs.gov

Organization: U.S. Geological Survey

Department: Geomagnetism Group

Title: Special Projects Coordinator

Specialties: geomagnetism, geophysics

Hans Tømmervik hans.tommervik@nina.no

Organization: Norwegian Institute for Nature Research

Department: Department of Arctic Ecology

Title: Research Ecologist

Specialties: remote sensing, plant ecology, reindeer

Current Research: Vegetation changes due to climate impacts. Reindeer range monitoring. Pollution impacts to vegetation (SO2 and heavy metals) in the Kola peninsula and Siberia (Nikel, Monchegorsk, Norilsk). Biodiversty studies.

Dennis Trabant dtrabant@usgs.gov

Organization: U.S. Geological Survey

Department: Water Resources Disc

Title: Hydrologist-Glaciologist

Specialties: glaciology, hydrology, global change

Current Research: Long-term monitoring of two glaciers in Alaska, and synthesis and analysis of the long-term record (30 years). Analysis of ice volumes on volcanoes. Glacier hazards and special events such as surges and outburst floods.

Bliss Tracy b_l_tracy@hc-sc.gc.ca

Organization: Health Canada

Department: Health Canada

Title: Research Scientist and Head of Radiological Impact

Specialties: radiation, environmental health, atmospheric sciences

Current Research: Effects of alpha radiation in Arctic food chains. Long-range transport of radioactive pollution to the Arctic.

Donn Tracy donnt@fishgame.state.ak.us

Organization: Alaska Department of Fish and Game

Title: Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Area Shellfish Research Biologist

Specialties: biology, fish

Current Research: Population assessment surveys. Life history studies. Fishing gear experiments (bycatch studies).

Verena Traeger dr.verena.traeger@gmail.com

Organization: University of Vienna

Department: Institute for Cultural- and Social Anthropology

Title: Dr phil

Specialties: Inuit culture, ethnography, history

Current Research: Avanersuaq (North Greenland), Greenland, Eastern Arctic

Martyn Tranter m.tranter@bristol.ac.uk

Organization: University of Bristol

Department: Department of Geographical Sciences

Title: Professor

Specialties: glaciology, geochemistry, water quality

Current Research: Biogeochemistry of glacial runoff on Svalbard. Biogeochemical reactions in the cryosphere. Low temperature aqueous geochemistry.

Dmitri Travin d.travin@unesco.org

Organization: Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission

Department: Ocean Services/IDNDR

Title: Consultant-Ocean Mapping

Specialties: mapping

Current Research: Coordinates Ocean Mapping Programme for the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO. International Bathymetric Chart of the Arctic Ocean.

Stephen Traynor stephen.traynor@canada.ca

Organization: Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada

Department: Land Administration

Title: Regional Director General

Specialties: geomorphology, environmental assessment, permafrost terrains

Current Research: Eskers research in the Slave Geological province for potential use in industrial infrastructure and environmental protection.

Stephen Treacy steve_treacy@mms.gov

Organization: U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management

Title: Senior Wildlife Biologist

Specialties: marine mammals, whale habitat, endangered species

Current Research: Bowhead Whale Aerial Survey Project.

Margaret Treble margaret.treble@dfo-mpo.gc.ca

Organization: Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Freshwater Institute

Department: Arctic Research Division

Title: Stock Assessment Biologist

Specialties: marine fisheries, stock assessment

Current Research: Deap sea fisheries; Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides)

Renate Treffeisen rtreff@awi-potsdam.de

Organization: Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research

Department: Department of Physics and Chemistry of the Atmosphere

Title: Head of climate office

Specialties: air pollution, atmospheric sciences, atmospheric physics

Oleg Tregubov tregubov@anadyr.ru

Organization: Earth Cryosphere Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences Siberian Branch

Department: Regional geoecology and geocriology

Title: Manager of laboratory

Specialties: environmental sciences, biogeochemistry, cryospheric interactions

Current Research: ecosystem modeling

Paul Treitz paul.treitz@queensu.ca

Organization: Queen's University

Department: Department of Geography and Planning

Title: Professor

Specialties: remote sensing of biophysical variables, climate change, light detection and ranging (LiDAR)

Current Research: Arctic tundra and boreal forest environments account for a large proportion of Canada's land surface and are important systems within the context of global climate change research. These northern environments are thought to be particularly sensitive to changes in climate, yet it remains unclear as to how these environments will respond. It is expected that any alterations in arctic tundra and boreal forest ecosystem function associated with increased temperatures will be expressed through shifts in plant phenology (i.e., vegetation growth patterns with season), species composition, and abundance. Remote sensing provides a means for monitoring these shifts, with the potential to characterize biophysical variables that control carbon fluxes over landscapes or regions.

Our research focuses on the estimation and mapping of biophysical variables for northern terrestrial landscapes. In addition to the obvious impacts of increasing air temperatures, there are a number of factors that serve as controls on vegetation growth in the Canadian Arctic, including soil moisture, nutrient availability, soil type and topography/micro-topography, some of which are also impacted by warming temperatures. The variability and distribution of these environmental controls contribute to a highly heterogeneous vegetation cover. High spatial resolution remote sensing provides an opportunity to estimate and monitor this variability, with the potential to quantify biophysical variables that control carbon fluxes over large areas. However, detailed in situ studies are required for calibration and validation of appropriate remote sensing models to estimate these variables. The focus of our research is on modeling biophysical variables at multiple scales across a latitudinal gradient (~63°-77°N) for the Canadian Arctic; serving as a temperature gradient of approximate 10°C for mean-July temperatures - a surrogate for a warming climate. We are carrying out this research at Cape Bounty (75ºN), Melville Island; Boothia Peninsula (71ºN); and the Apex River, Baffin Island (63ºN), Nunavut.

Estimating biophysical variables for forested ecosystems represents a three-dimensional problem given the structural components of a forest ecosystem are distributed vertically as well as horizontally. Our current emphasis in the forest sector is on the modelling of biophysical variables (e.g. volume, biomass) and services (habitat suitability) for forest ecosystems using airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR). LiDAR captures three-dimensional information on forest structure (e.g., canopy height) and provides significant potential for volume and biomass estimation using forest allometry. Analysis and development of LiDAR height and density metrics is being conducted to determine how three-dimensional surfaces of the forest canopy and terrain can be created and utilized to predict the structural (and functional) nature of forest stands. We are currently involved in a national research program examining the modelling of forest biophysical variables as well as the transferability of these models across different forested environments.

Bruno Tremblay tremblay@ldeo.columbia.edu

Organization: Columbia University

Department: Department of Atmospheric and Ocean Sciences

Title: Adjunct Research Scientist

Specialties: climate modeling, sea ice modeling

Current Research: Sea ice model comparison project.

Marc-Adélard Tremblay matrem@microtec.net

Title: Ph.D.

Specialties: cultural anthropology, arctic science policy, Native issues

Current Research: Native government.

Kevin Trenberth trenbert@ucar.edu

Organization: National Center for Atmospheric Research

Department: Climate Analysis Section

Title: Distinguished senior scientist

Specialties: climate change, atmospheric sciences, climate modeling

Current Research: Co-chair of CLIVAR Research Focus Panel: “Consistency between planetary energy balance and ocean heat storage (CONCEPT-HEAT)”,

Erhard Treude treude-muenster@t-online.de

Department: Department of Economic Geography

Specialties: economic geography, circumpolar cultures, animal husbandry

Current Research: Reindeer husbandry.

Aradhna Tripati atri02@esc.cam.ac.uk

Organization: University of Cambridge

Department: Department of Earth Sciences

Specialties: paleoclimatology, geochemistry

Current Research: Past Arctic climate (Early Cenozoic)

Don Triplehorn ffdmt@uaf.edu

Organization: University of Alaska Fairbanks

Department: Department of Geology and Geophysics

Specialties: geology, sedimentology

Current Research: Tonsteins (altered volcanic ash layers associated with coal). Coal in Alaska. Radiometric dating of ancient volcanic ash layers.

Simon Troelstra s.r.troelstra@vu.nl

Organization: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Department: Cluster Earth and Climate

Title: Researcher

Specialties: paleoceanography, paleoclimatology, paleoecology

Current Research: NORCLIM investigates the relation between natural climate change and human activities in the Arctic during the last 2000 years. Areas: Newfoundland, West Greenland, Svalbard.

Stein Tronstad tronstad@npolar.no

Organization: Norwegian Polar Institute

Department: Polar Environmental Management

Title: Section Head

Specialties: data management, remote sensing, geographic information systems

Trond Trosterud trond.trosterud@hum.uit.no

Organization: UiT: The Arctic University of Norway

Department: Department of Finnish

Title: cand. philol.

Specialties: linguistics

Current Research: Linguistic morphology. The grammatical structure of Samoyedic and Ugric languages. Language technology for various Sami languages.

Janett Trubatch anjlt@uaa.alaska.edu

Organization: University of Alaska Anchorage

Department: Research and Graduate Studies

Title: Associate Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies

Specialties: neurobiology, physics