Doctoral Seminar – Whalen Dillon
Doctoral Seminar: Spatial scale, pathogen spillover, and coexistence in an emerging forest disease system. By Whalen Dillon, candidate for PhD in Forestry and Environmental Resources
Doctoral Seminar: Spatial scale, pathogen spillover, and coexistence in an emerging forest disease system. By Whalen Dillon, candidate for PhD in Forestry and Environmental Resources
Forensic analyses are often concerned with identifying the spatial source of biological residue. Using recent advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies, dust collected from nearly any object can be shown to…
In this hands-on workshop presented by ProStar, you will learn how OpenLayers is leveraged and applied in today's modern GIS web applications. Bring your laptop to become familiar with the OpenLayers library and…
Assessing water quality along rivers is vital for watershed management. The Bayesian Maximum Entropy method of modern geostatistics provides a powerful framework to model the space/time variability of water quality…
CyberGIS represents an interdisciplinary field combining advanced computing and cyberinfrastructure, geographic information science and systems (GIS), spatial analysis and modeling, and a number of geospatial domains (e.g., emergency management, smart cities, and…
As home to more than 50% of the human population, urban areas are of growing importance as sources of airborne and water-borne pollutants and sinks for increasing amounts of energy…
Deciding upon an appropriate spatial frame of reference is an important component of any observational analysis. Geographically fixed frameworks are not always well suited to meteorology, which can be described…
A variety of powerful computing resources are available at the Center for Geospatial Analytics and College of Natural Resources to help you perform your geospatial and big-data research. Do you…