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UCAR Magazine
Regional variations add a wild card to future sea-level rise
Along with usually persistent rains, there was a different kind of watery surprise this summer for people on the U.S. Atlantic coast. From June into early July, tides ran as high as 60 centimeters (2 feet) above predicted values from the barrier islands of the Southeast to the rocky shores of Maine...
Rounding up severe weather
An armada of tornado researchers builds a moveable field study
UCAR Magazine
Joachim Kuettner's remarkable life hits a new milestone: year 100
Spectacular sunspots
Beauty and insight emerge from the first comprehensive sunspot model
Today's assignment: plan a field project
Graduate students pull together an observing campaign in short order for an NCAR colloquium
Rick Anthes and Jay Fein
Hats off to program managers: Three giants from NSF
As a rule, the people who oversee scientific research for federal agencies get far less appreciation than they deserve. Science at UCAR and many universities would be impossible without the...
Rana Fine
Rana Fine, University of Miami
The changing landscape of science in Washington, D.C.
During my term as chair of the UCAR Board of Trustees, it has been exciting to witness the changing...
MIchele Rienecker
Michele Rienecker, NASA
How much progress have we made in predicting El Niño, as opposed to nowcasting it?
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