Participants
Participants 2024
We received 121 applications for the available 28 slots.
US-based (14)
Mahsa Bahrami, Pennsylvania State Univ.
Leveraging deep learning to observe and parameterize Antarctic supraglacial lakes
Yueyi Che, Stanford Univ.
Modeling Antarctica Ice Sheet deformations, flow patterns, and meltwater impact
Michael Daniel, Univ. of Arizona
Leveraging airborne snow radar to validate satellite and reanalysis products for Alaskan glaciers
Max Filter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Constraining Mechanics of Glacier Flow with the Propagation of Traveling Waves on Columbia Glacier, Alaska
Amy Jensen, Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks
Disentangling the drivers of flow variability on Greenland outlet glaciers
Zachary Katz, Colorado School of Mines
Tidally modulated stick-Slip on Whillans Ice Plain, West Antarctica
Ashlesha Khatiwada, Colorado State Univ.
Examining the mass balance processes of very small glaciers
Chris Larson, University of Pennsylvania
Modeling Greenland Ice Sheet Melt During MIS 11 and the Eemian
Logan Mann, Dartmouth College
The Anatomy of an ice stream: Thermomechanics, stress balance, and boundary conditions
Neosha Gupta Narayanan, Georgia Inst. of Technology
Investigation of Subsurface Glacial Hydrology and Ice Mass Loss in Greenland
Annegret Pohle, Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks
Reconstructing a 1980’s DEM of the Greenland ice sheet
Niya Shao, Univ. of Florida
Stochastic simulation of mass-conserving subglacial topography with Monte Carlo Markov Chain
Margot Shaya, Univ. of Washington
Interpreting ice flow at the Allan Hills using measurements and models of ice fabric
Claire Wilson, Carnegie Mellon Univ.
Investigating the albedo feedbacks through energy balance modeling and fieldwork on Gulkana Glacier, Alaska
Outside US (14)
Inger Bij de Vaate, Univ. of Oslo, Norway
Glacier modeling using machine learning
Gopika Das K, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, India
Seasonal evolution of supraglacial lakes and ice velocity changes on glaciers in Greenland
Mae Evans Univ. of Leeds, UK
Greenland Ice Sheet – ocean interactions: Using satellite data and AI to understand ice
dynamics
Simon Jung, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Modelling subglacial drainage of soft bedded glaciers
Mamta K C, Univ. of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany
Reconciling machine learning and glacier system modeling
Dylan Kreynen, Univ. of Oslo, Norway
Snowline mapping from remote sensing and data assimilation
Dia Martinez Gracey, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Developing a predictive model of thermal structure
Clara Nyqvist, University of Edinburgh, UK
Stability of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet from radar-sounded englacial structures
Jakub (Kuba) Oniszk, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark
Role of Subglacial Hydrology on Greenland Hydrodynamics
Richard Parsons, Northumbria University, Newcastle, UK
Glacier Calving: Observations and Modelling
Hannah Phelps, Univ. of British Columbia, Canada
Implementing a katabatic flow model for use in regional surface mass balance models
Magali Ponds, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
Role of glaciers as water towers in a changing climate
Marcelo Santis, Univ. of Chile, Chile
Glacial Lake Outburst Floods and glaciofluvial changes at the Patagonian Icefield
Maria Schroeder, Univ. of Innsbruck
Land-terminating ice cliffs in North Greenland: processes, divers and their
relation to regional climate
Note that we typically have some drop-outs. We will fill any vacant slots from the waiting list.
Instructors
Andy Aschwanden (Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks, UAF), Ed Bueler(UAF), Mark Fahnestock (UAF), Regine Hock (UAF/Oslo Univ.), Martin Truffer (UAF), Karen Alley (Univ. of Manitoba, Canada), Gwenn Flowers (Simon Fraser Univ., Canada), David Rounce (Carnegie Mellon Univ.)
Guest lecturer: Michael Loso (National Park Service Alaska)