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NORCOWE has released its annual report for 2013
Every year the Meltzer foundation hands out prizes to young and exceptional researchers at the University of Bergen
The solar radiation at the top of the atmosphere is attenuated before it reaches the earth's surface. The attenuation is due to extinction (scattering and absorption) by particles and molecules in the atmosphere. If the solar radiation at the top of the atmosphere is known, the radiation received at the earth's surface can be used to reveal the properties of the atmospheric aerosol.
Spatial dynamics of the bearded goby and its key fish predators off Namibia varies with climate and oxygen availability
This year's winter school will be held during March 19 - 21 in Finse.
Four researchers from the Algorithms group are co-authors of a paper recently accepted to STOC 2014.
Joan Sala is a biology bachelor student from the University of Barcelona (UB). During the fourth year of his bachelor he has to carry out a thesis, so he decided to come to Bergen and join the EvoFish group!
University of Oslo is assisting students and scientists in Tanzania to increase the level of knowledge within Geology.
Shaken, not stirred. A new paper is shaking the position of the Baranov catch equation as one of the cornerstones of fisheries science. Fortunately, this shaking turns out not be too serious.
A recent Bjerknes study shows that the Gulf Stream鈥檚 Arctic limb is constrained by its heat transfer from the south.
A team of international researchers publishes in Nature after a 2 month expedition last year to drill into ocean crust 4800m below the surface
What will happen to the Greenland Ice Sheet if the Arctic sea ice covers disappears?
Researcher Bjarte Hannisdal at the Centre for Geobiology recently received a prestigious Bergen Research Foundation Recruitment Grant for his project 鈥淓arth System Interactions and Information Transfer鈥
CGB scientists Cedric Hamelin and Kristian Haaga are aboard the French IFREMER鈥檚 research vessel the Pourquoi pas?, investigating the detachment fault system at 13 degrees North on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.
Over the last half-century, high performance computing has proved itself as essential a tool for the earth sciences as the weather balloon and the rock hammer.

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