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Harold A. Linstone, emeritus professor of systems science at Portland State University and longtime editor in chief of Technological Forecasting and Social Change, said Dr. Hoos was in many ways the intellectual conscience in the field of technology assessment.
FRED W. GLOVER, MediaOne Professor of Systems Science, Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado, Boulder.
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Eric Rignot, a professor of earth systems science at the University of California, Irvine, who was not involved in the study, said the research was noteworthy because it was the first time that researchers were able to use the same technique to gather measurements of all of the world's glaciers and ice caps.
Formerly Professor of Philosophy, Systems Science, and Futures Studies in various universities in the US, Europe, and the Far East, Laszlo lectures worldwide.
"The federal government can slow the development of renewables and low-carbon technologies, but it can't stop it," Jackson, a professor of Earth systems science at Stanford University, said in a press release.
Dr. Mima, a professor of system information science at Future University, said that the smell of coffee seemed to serve as a trigger for informal communication, possibly because of the cultural meaning associated with coffee in everyday life.
"The fact that this is happening even in the cold Antarctic should ring like an alarm bell to everyone's ears," Dr. Eric Rignot, professor of earth system science at UCI and one of the researchers, told The Huffington Post in an email.
Robert Jackson, professor of earth system science at Stanford University, and a co-author of the paper, warned that methane should also be a key focus of attempts to control climate change.
Eric Rignot, professor of Earth system science at the University of California, Irvine, said that the glacier was "being hit from above and below", with rising air temperatures driving melting at the top of the glacier, and its underside being eroded away by ocean currents that are warmer now than in the past.
"With higher temperatures, there's more evaporation from soils, more transpiration from plants, earlier melting of snowpack and relatively more rain rather than snow," explained Noah Diffenbaugh, a senior fellow and professor of earth system science at Stanford University. .
Rob Jackson, a professor of environmental earth systems science at Stanford University, has been investigating possible ties between fracking and poor water quality since 2009, when he and his colleagues realized that no peer-reviewed papers on the topic had been published.
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