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BEGIN:STANDARD
DTSTART:20121104T020000
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
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DTSTART:20120311T020000
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UID:calendar.4089.field_date.0@calendar.lafayette.edu
DTSTAMP:20260610T180619Z
DESCRIPTION:The percent of the population dwelling in urban and suburban ar
 eas in the US \nhas increased over the last 200 years\, from 10% to close 
 to 80%. Given that \nthe majority of humans live in these environments\, u
 rban ecosystems have a \ngreater impact on regional and global systems as 
 compared to a similarly \nsized undisturbed ecosystem. Watersheds effectiv
 ely integrate physical\, \nbiological\, chemical and anthropogenic process
 es\; thus the geochemistry of \nrivers provides a signal of landscape func
 tion and health. By sampling \nwatersheds across a gradient of urbanizatio
 n the relative importance of human \ninputs and microbial processing (e.g.
  removal and transformations) on \nnitrogen and carbon exports from differ
 ent landscapes can be determined.\n\n\nRebecca Barnes is currently a visit
 ing Assistant Professor at the Bard Center \nfor Environmental Policy.  Sh
 e obtained her M.P.A. in Environmental Policy \nand Natural Resource Manag
 ement at Indiana University and Ph.D. at Yale’s \nEnvironment School.  She
  was most recently an NSF  postdoctoral Fellow at the \nUSGS in Boulder\, 
 CO.
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20120210T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20120210T130000
LAST-MODIFIED:20120206T003531Z
LOCATION:Hugel 103
SUMMARY:LSS:Cities & Suburbia: How People Influence Nitrogen and Carbon Cyc
 ling
URL;TYPE=URI:https://calendar.lafayette.edu/node/4089
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