Ep. 2 Kaustubh Thirumalai: Methane proxies in paleoclimate and implications for future climate change
Listen now
Description
The guest of this episode is Kaustubh Thirumalai, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona. We talked about him growing up and studying in India, and changing his path from chemical engineering to climate. We also talked a lot about networking in academia. The paper we discussed is about how sources of methane in the atmosphere from paleo records are related to orbital variability, and the implications for modern climate change. Learning all the things we need to take into account when analyzing paleo records was eye- opening…. And his spectral analysis of long paleo records is absolutely interesting and potentially applicable to other fields… so listen on! You can find more info on Kau’s website https://thirumalai.geo.arizona.edu/. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-climate-academy/message
More Episodes
Dan is a scientist working at NCAR and his main interests span the fields of oceanography, biogeochemistry and computer science. Here he explains why biogeochemistry matters for projections of future climate change, and we have an interesting exchange on the effects of pollution on fisheries and...
Published 11/17/20
Published 11/17/20
It was a pleasure to chat with Nicola Maher who is now a CIRES visiting fellow in Boulder, Colorado. We discussed her journey from Australia to the US through Germany and our common love for gluehwein. We had interesting discussions regarding the large ensemble and her direct involvement with...
Published 11/09/20