BG
Biogeosciences

First BG Campfire with special guests from the Soil System Sciences Division!

First BG Campfire with special guests from the Soil System Sciences Division!

We are excited to announce the 1st Biogeosciences Division Campfire event!

The spirit of our campfire events is to bring together the biogeoscience community, irrespective of career stage, to discuss new BG research-relevant ideas and tools with one another.

The aim of this welcoming, informal and inclusive BG virtual campfire will be to widen our research network and foster support within the BG community through targeted discussions on important and diverse topics proposed by you.

We want to know what you think the most timely and relevant topics are for our community, so we can shape and guide the future BG Campfire programme and provide events that you enjoy and help you meet and connect with other biogeoscientists.

To kick off our 1st campfire we have invited along our Soil System Sciences Division buddies to learn more about their recent Campfire Events and share experiences. We have organised a lively interactive session where all participants can come along with their own ideas and topics to propose for future campfire events which we will bring together during a fun brainstorming session that will shape our future BG campfire events.

We look forward to meeting you all around the BG campfire and sharing inspiring thoughts and ideas with one another, everyone is welcome so please spread the word amongst your colleagues and collaborators!

We are eager to learn more about your diverse and inspiring ideas!

When? May 27th 13:00 (CET).

Register for the event: here 

Contacts: Elisabet Martínez-Sancho (ecs-bg@egu.eu), Ben Fisher (ben.fisher@ed.ac.uk)

 

Image provided by Natalie Wingate (@natalie.wingate.artist)

Elisabet is a postdoctoral researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Her research focuses on understanding the impact of climate change on tree growth and wood formation and its feedbacks onto terrestrial cycles.


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