Date

Call for Abstracts
American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2022

12-16 December 2022
Chicago, Illinois and Online

Abstract submission deadline: 3 August 2022

For more information about the meeting, go to:
https://www.agu.org/Fall-Meeting


The American Geophysical Union (AGU) is accepting abstracts for the AGU Fall Meeting 2022. This hybrid meeting will take place 12-16 December 2022 in Chicago, Illinois and online.

The following sessions are accepting abstracts:

SESSION C013: Coupled-system Processes of the Central Arctic Atmosphere-Sea Ice-Ocean System: Harnessing Field Obs & Advancing Models
Conveners: Matthew Shupe, Marcel Nicolaus, Amy Solomon, and Jessie Creamean

The central Arctic coupled environmental system is changing rapidly, with dramatic potential implications for climate, weather, ecosystems, and society. Thinner and less extensive sea ice can impact the flow of heat, the exchange of gases, seasonal melt and freeze of ice, ice dynamics, light available for biological productivity, and many other related physical, biogeochemical, and ecosystem processes. Importantly, many of these changes and processes are interdependent. In this session, conveners welcome field, laboratory, remote sensing, and modeling studies that examine all aspects of the changing central Arctic coupled system, especially including processes that cut across the atmosphere, sea ice, snow, and ocean. Submissions are encouraged that incorporate cross-disciplinary research topics, examine interseasonal linkages, conduct observation-model synthesis, and/or bridge the many scales between in situ observations and large scale remote-sensing and modeling. Contributions from recent central Arctic field campaigns like MOSAiC are particularly relevant.

To submit an abstract to this session, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm22/prelim.cgi/Session/160657

For questions about this session, contact:
Matthew Shupe
Email: matthew.shupe [at] noaa.gov
Phone: 303-497-6471

SESSION C002: Advances in Arctic Observing and Data Systems
Conveners: Ravi Darwin Sankar, Maribeth S. Murray, Alice C. Bradley, Margaret Rudolf

A changing Arctic affects the environment from the local to the global scale: rapid change threatens Indigenous livelihoods, communities, ecosystems, and the global climate system. Sustained observations that enable us to track, understand, and project this change are essential to guide adaptation and mitigation responses at various scales. The Arctic Observing Summit is a biennial event convened as part of the Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks (SAON) initiative to guide the design, coordination, and operation of an international network of observing systems that improves our understanding of and response to Arctic change. This session invites papers focused on how sustained observations can contribute to well-being across a range of scales, and better understanding of rapid Arctic change to build resilience and inform policy and decision-making from the community level to the global scale. Conveners also welcome papers that consider new and sustainable ways of supporting and expanding observing activities through collaboration with Indigenous Peoples, novel use of existing observational infrastructure, and ways in which observing systems can be responsive to emerging issues.

To submit an abstract to this session, go to:
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm22/prelim.cgi/Session/160260

For questions about this session, contact:
Ravi Darwin Sankar
Email: sankarrd [at] longwood.edu
Phone: 434-395-2588