Calendar

Science-related events in the Pacific Northwest

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The week's events

  • Science on Tap - Palm Oil 101: Is your chocolate harming orangutans? How to have your cake and forests too!

    Science on Tap - Palm Oil 101: Is your chocolate harming orangutans? How to have your cake and forests too!


    June 24, 2024

    "Palm Oil 101: Is your chocolate harming orangutans? How to have your cake and forests too!"

    Monica Hinckley

    Conservation Administrator, Woodland Park Zoo

    June 24, 2024 7PM

    ***Note: event starts at 7pm, but please come at 6pm for food and good seats -- please see details below***

    Please note the timing! Cafe Arta is open on Monday only for the SoT event. Events are from 7-8pm, but seats go quickly so arrive early. Food can be ordered starting at 5:30pm, we encourage diners order prior to 6:30pm to receive food on time. Seating is limited and is first come, first served. We hope to see you there!

    Ravenna Third Place Books
    6504 20th Ave NE.
    Seattle, WA 98115

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  • Meet Seattle’s Amphibians!

    Meet Seattle’s Amphibians!


    June 25, 2024

    Campus location Douglas Research Conservatory (DRC)
    Accessibility Contact urbhort@uw.edu
    Presenter Jasmine Baker
    Contact Information bakerj28@miamioh.edu
    Ticket Link apps.ideal-logic.com…
    Description The Pacific Northwest has an amazing array of amphibians due to the high precipitation received. These fascinating animals can be bio-indicators of environmental health, including if there are invaders present: on the micro or macro scale. Can you tell a Northern Salamander from a Long-toed Salamander? Which features leave a wetland vulnerable to invasion from a giant from the east coast?

    Join Jasmine Baker, Project Dragonfly graduate student, to learn more about these mucus-membrane skinned animals that are still found throughout the greater Seattle area, how Woodland Park Zoo is working with Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife to monitor their populations and how you can support amphibians in your neighborhood.

    Jasmine Baker, M. Ed, is a veteran middle school science teacher, who volunteers with Woodland Park Zoo's Amphibian Monitoring Project. Currently, Jasmine is completing her second Master's degree with Project Dragonfly through Miami University. She is passionate about connecting people to the small, less popular aspects of the natural world and revealing their amazing role in the ecosystem. Slimy, strange and small biological wonders are some of the most fascinating in her eyes. This class is a proactive response to her dive into the history and ecology of the Union Bay Natural Area, which revealed how intensely the invasive American Bullfrog had depressed native amphibians. Her goal is to educate the public on local species, threats, and actions they can take to support amphibian biodiversity. In addition to her coursework, she enjoys documenting insect observations on iNaturalist, hiking, and exploring Washington with her husband and dog.

    Cost: $25
    Financial aid slots available

     

    Link apps.ideal-logic.com…
    Center for Urban Horticulture
    3501 NE 41st St
    Seattle, WA 98105
  • Book talk: Ferris Jabr with Dr. Suzanne Simard

    Book talk: Ferris Jabr with Dr. Suzanne Simard


    June 26, 2024

    Hosted by Town Hall Seattle

    Ferris Jabr with Dr. Suzanne Simard

    Bringing the Earth to Life

    How much of our own planet do we actually understand? One of humanity’s oldest beliefs is that our world is alive. Though once ridiculed by some scientists, the idea of Earth as a vast interconnected living system has gained acceptance in recent decades.

    In author Ferris Jabr’s new book Becoming Earth: How Our Planet Came to Life, Jabr examines the connections between life and geology through the many ways that living creatures, including our own species, have transformed the atmosphere, oceans, and continents throughout the planet’s history. Becoming Earth explores ecosystems, discussing plants, weather, animal engineering, the microscopic and the microbial. Additionally, Jabr scrutinizes the human impact on Earth, noting the ways that people have altered existence through fossil fuel consumption, agriculture, and pollution.

    Drawing on recent scientific insights, the book reexamines the ancient idea that Earth itself is alive and investigates how this holistic perspective can help us restore longstanding ecological rhythms and possibly mitigate some of the worst outcomes of the climate crisis. From an experimental nature reserve in remote Siberia, to the heart of the Amazon rainforest, to a gold mine-turned-research lab a mile below the Earth’s surface, Jabr invites readers to journey around the world to better understand our planet and our role in it.

    Ferris Jabr is a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine. He has also written for The New Yorker, Harper’s, The Atlantic, National Geographic, and Scientific American. He is the recipient of a Whiting Foundation Creative Nonfiction Grant and fellowships from UC Berkeley and MIT. His work has been anthologized in several editions of Best American Science and Nature Writing. Ferris Jabr lives in Portland, Oregon, with his husband, Ryan, their dog, Jack, and more plants than they can count.

    Dr. Suzanne Simard is a Professor of Forest Ecology at the University of British Columbia and leader of both The Mother Tree Project and Mother Tree Network. She is known worldwide for her pioneering research on how trees interact with one another and communicate using below-ground fungal networks. Her NYT-bestselling memoir, Finding The Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest, won the 2023 Lewis Thomas Prize in recognition of its innovative fusion of science and the humanities. Most recently, Time magazine named her one of the most influential people of 2024.

    Town Hall Seattle
    1119 8th Ave.
    Seattle, WA 98101

Please note: NSWA provides these event details as a courtesy to science-related organizations throughout the Pacific Northwest. Please confirm event details with the sponsoring organization before attending.