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The
National Science Foundation contributed funding in support of
this polar science symposium. |
The Smithsonian Institution announces a polar science symposium
in early May 2007, as one of the inaugural U.S. contributions to
celebrate the International Polar Year (IPY) 2007-2008. “Smithsonian
at the Poles: Contributions to International Polar Year Science”
is being convened by the Office of the Under Secretary for Science.
The symposium
will present research findings by Smithsonian scholars and their
collaborators from Arctic and Antarctic research, with particular
attention to changes in polar systems past, present and future,
and their global impact. The symposium will carry on a tradition
of polar science that began nearly 150 years ago and resulted in
some of the world’s foremost collections and archives of Arctic
and Antarctic materials.
The symposium
is scheduled for May 3-4, at the Smithsonian’s National Museum
of Natural History and the Smithsonian Castle in Washington, D.C.
The two-day event will feature an introductory plenary session followed
by concurrent sessions of invited papers and panel discussions,
evening public and keynote lectures, and tours of collections. The
expected audience includes Smithsonian scholars and research staff,
university-based scientists and students, program managers and representatives
from federal agencies, congressional staff, news media and the general
public.
More than 35
scholars will discuss their papers on the following six themes:
polar astronomy; systematics and biology of polar organisms; environmental
change and polar marine ecosystems; IPY histories and legacies;
methods and techniques of under-ice research; and cultural studies.
Sessions will feature disciplinary presentations from both the Arctic
and Antarctica.
Speakers will
include research leaders from the Smithsonian and their National
Science Foundation-supported polar research partners. The Smithsonian
speakers will represent the Institution’s research units (Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian
Environmental Research Center, National Zoological Park, National
Air and Space Museum), Smithsonian Archives and the Office of the
Under Secretary for Science. A special aim of the symposium is to
network Smithsonian studies with other federal agencies during the
International Polar Year.
Results will
be disseminated to scholars and the public through publications,
Web sites, and the news media. Symposium papers will be published
by Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press as a proceedings volume,
available in print by mid-2008.
To disseminate
or print this announcement, please download
this document.
Igor Krupnik, Michael Lang, Scott Miller
Symposium Co-Chairs

The
National Science Foundation (NSF) contributed funding in support
of Science at the Poles. NSF, an independent federal agency, was
designated the lead agency for the federal government’s International
Polar year activities by the White House Office of Science and Technology
Policy. NSF manages the U.S. Antarctic Program, which coordinates
all U.S. science on the southernmost continent; the NSF director
heads the Interagency Arctic Research Policy Committee (IARPC).
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