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Cyberseminars

The 2013 Spring Cyberseminar Series has concluded.
 
What is a Cyberseminar?
A cyberseminar ("webinar") is a PowerPoint presentation presented online with a live instructor. The instructor and attendees communicate with each other as if they were in the same room. Also called "Webinars," virtual seminars tend to be replicas of classroom workshops, whereas the cyberseminar is often a short presentation with limited participation. [How do I connect to the cyberseminars?]

The typical format of CUAHSI cyberseminars includes a 40-45 minute presentation followed by a moderated Question and Answer discussion with the virtual audience. Cyberseminars are recorded using Adobe Connect software and these recordings are provided no later than a week aftereach presentation. PFD versions of the cyberseminars are also made available for the talks.


 View complete alphabetical listing of CUAHSI cyberseminars 


 

 

 

11.16.2012
Monitoring Hydroelectric Change in a Restored Riparian Wetland: A Need for Improved Soil Moisture Measurement Technology...
 
 
11.09.2012
Methods in Hydrologic Science: The Synergies between Redundant Low-cost Wireless Sensors and the Data Cloud Come of Age...
 
 
11.02.2012
Title: Advances in Geophysical Tools for Estimating Hydrologic Parameters and Processes...
 
 
10.19.2012
Title: In Situ Sensors for Measuring River Ecosystem Processes...
 
 
10.05.2012
Title: Passive Sampling for Catchment Water Quality Monitoring...
 
 
4.27.2012
Christina River Basin CZO: Spatial and Temporal Integration of Carbon, Mineral and Water Fluxes: A Whole Watershed Approach to Quantifying Anthropogenic Carbon Sequestration...
 
 
4.20.2012
The Luquillo CZO: Linking Lithology to Critical Zone Processes...
 
 
4.13.2012
The Willamette Water 2100 Study...
 
 
4.06.2012
Snowmelt as a Driver of Ecohydrological Processes: Low-hanging Fruit for Cross-CZO Research...
 
 
3.30.2012
Developing a Framework to Assess the Water Quality and Quantity Impacts of Climate Change, Shifting Land Use, and Urbanization in a Midwestern Agricultural Landscape...