Research Interests / Contacts
Natural Resources and Environmental Studies (NRES) is one of four primary research themes at UNBC: improving understanding of phenomena and processes related to the atmospheric sciences is a key component of this work. Our faculty are members of the university's NRES Institute, which seeks to promote inter-disciplinary studies spanning the physical environment, ecology, biology and the social sciences.
- Dr Stephen Déry
Associate Professor, Canada Research Chair in Northern Hydrometeorology
Dr Déry's interests focus on the impacts of climate-change in the North, in both British Columbia and elsewhere in Canada, relating primarily to interactions between atmospheric and hydrological processes.
- Office: 8-414
- Phone: 250-960-5193
- e-Mail: (mouseover for address)
- Personal web-page
- Research pages
- Graduate Students and Research Associates
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Sina Abadzadesahraei PhD candidate
Topic: Closing the water balance of Coles Lake
e-mail
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Michael Allchin PhD candidate, QRRC Manager
Topic: Spatio-temporal relationships between snow-cover and landscape albedo in the Cariboo Mountains, BC
e-mail
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Barry Booth IWRG Network Manager
e-mail
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Hunter Gleason MSc student
Topic: tbc
e-mail
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Joseph Gothreau MSc student
Topic: tbc
(co-superviser: Dr Margot Parkes)
e-mail
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Rachel Hay MSc student
Topic: tbc
e-mail
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Marco Hernández-Henríquez Research Associate
e-mail
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Siraj Ul Islam Post-doctoral Fellow
e-mail
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Rajtantra Lilhare PhD candidate
Topic: Modelling streamflow input to the Hudson Bay drainage system
e-mail
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Matt Macdonald Post-doctoral Fellow
(co-superviser: Dr Trish Stadnyk, University of Manitoba)
e-mail
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Aseem Raj Sharma PhD candidate
Topic: Rivers in the sky: the role of atmospheric rivers in the water resources of western Canada
e-mail www
- Dr Peter Jackson
Professor of Atmospheric Science
Dr Jackson is a mesoscale meteorologist, with primary research interests relating to windflow and other atmospheric processes in complex landscapes, such as in mountainous terrain and along coastlines. His investigations are based on a combination of in situ and remote observations, as well as numerical simulations.
- Dr Youmin Tang
Professor, Canada Research Chair in Climate Prediction and Predictability
Dr Tang's research seeks to develop innovative mathematical techniques and advanced numerical models to reduce uncertainties in climate predictions at seasonal to inter-annual ranges.
- The full environmental science faculty list is available here.
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