Atmospheric and Terrestrial Sciences

Ivy Plus Universities to recruit students in Puerto Rico

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Providence, RI, August 22, 2013 – Again this year, representatives from top US research universities will be visiting Puerto Rico to recruit undergraduate students for master’s and doctoral programs.  The Ivy Plus Group has come to the island annually for the past 20 years.

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Cartilla del Agua en Puerto Rico - recurso de hidrología

Mónica Ivelisse Feliú-Mójer's picture

Nuestro amigo Pablo Llerandi Román nos hizo llegar el enlace para la Cartilla del Agua en Puerto Rico un excelente recurso sobre la hidrología y geohidrología de Puerto Rico. Puede ser útil para proyectos de investigación y enseñanza. ¡Compártanlo!

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Poor urban planning evidenced once again

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Gerardo E. Alvarado León /galvarado@elnuevodia.com

The recent landslide in Villa España, Bayamón, evidences, once again the unsustainable and poor urban planning policies in Puerto Rico. Experts agree that the geological risks of an area are often ignored to give way to construction.

The original version of this article is in Spanish. To see it click on ESPAÑOL at the top right of your screen. You can also contact our editor Mónica Feliú-Mójer (moefeliu@cienciapr.org).

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Measure to protect our coasts

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Aurelio Mercado-Irizarry / Oceanógrafo

The recent landslide in Bayamón, the publication of the long awaited Land Use Plan and the news that sea level rise has surpassed expectations underscore the need for a Coastal Construction Separation Line (CCSL) to protect Puerto Rico's coasts.

The original version of this article is in Spanish. You can see it by clicking on ESPAÑOL at the top right of your screen. You can also contact our editor Mónica Feliú Mójer (moefeliu@cienciapr.org).

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Cuba faces vast land losses as sea levels rise

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Phys.org

Cuba risks losing a vast stretch of beach front homes and pristine coastal habitat by 2050, because of rapidly rising sea levels, a top environmental official warned Thursday. 

At a panel discussion on Cuban environmental policy, Tomas Escobar, director of the island's National Environment Agency, said rising oceans could submerge huge areas of the Caribbean island, with potentially devastating consequences.

Report: Puerto Rico unprepared for climate change

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Danica Coto

Environmental officials and scientists warned Friday that Puerto Rico is dangerously vulnerable to the effects of global climate change and urged it to prepare by better-regulated coastal development, and perhaps even by building artificial reefs. 

The storm-caused floods and erosion that have always affected the U.S. Caribbean territory are expected to grow worse as temperatures and seas rise, perhaps by 22 inches (57 centimeters) by 2060, according to a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers study.

Phys.org

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

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Danica Coto

Environmental officials and scientists warned Friday that Puerto Rico is dangerously vulnerable to the effects of global climate change and urged it to prepare by better-regulated coastal development, and perhaps even by building artificial reefs. 

The storm-caused floods and erosion that have always affected the U.S. Caribbean territory are expected to grow worse as temperatures and seas rise, perhaps by 22 inches (57 centimeters) by 2060, according to a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers study.

CONVERGE - For applicants to graduate school at MIT

Elvin Joel Estrada Garcia's picture

The CONVERGE mission is to increase the presence of underrepresented and underserved students in MIT’s graduate programs. To achieve this goal, CONVERGE hosts a four-day graduate school preview weekend on the MIT campus during the fall.

The program:

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