
Scott Ketcheson
@sj_ketcheson
Assistant Professor at Athabasca U. CRC in Hydrological Sustainability. Particularly interested in wetland-dominated headwater and human-impacted catchments.
ID: 722135752767905794
18-04-2016 18:52:34
304 Tweet
472 Followers
286 Following

Yes, congratulations Haley! Well-deserved. Pete Whittington and I are lucky to be working with you on your MSc!

We are seeking a new grad student passionate about groundwater, permafrost, and water quality. Interest/experience in numerical modeling and coding an asset. MSc or PhD. Water Studies


Really excited and honoured to be part of the Canada Wildfire Strategic Network and what a great way to kick off our discussions with presentations by @LoriDanielsUBC, Dr. Laura Chasmer & Sophie Wilkinson We have a PhD student & PDF opp in peat hydrology and wildfire. DM for details.

I guess this is a #MondayRead now but thanks to Athabasca Watershed Council for the summary of a recent talk to members of the BoD on my #hydrology #research at the #SMHCO!

Looks like an interesting paper from the Mike Waddington lab!



*Conference Alert* Call for Abstracts for #CWRA2022 National Conference “Valuing our Shared Waters” is open (4-Feb deadline). Canadian Water Resources Association #water conference.cwra.org



New study by Igor Pavlovskii on coastal groundwater model calibration using freshwater lens geometry and the implications for groundwater-fed ponds on Sable Island. Thanks to funding from @MEOPAR_NCE and Parks Canada rdcu.be/cSedg


It was definitely a great week! Really enjoyed all the soils talk, and happy to be involved in the ongoing work at the National Boreal Program Wetland Centre, including the #CitizenScience project! tinyurl.com/33982nak


Join us in two weeks for the 13th Annual McMaster SEES Woo Water Lecture ! Dr. Nandita Basu (University Research Chair, Global Water Sustainability and Ecohydrology, University of Waterloo) Nandita Basu In person (GSB-330) or via Zoom (link coming soon) McMaster Faculty of Science




14th Annual Woo Water Lecture McMaster SEES with MAC alum Carl Mitchell on Nov 28th (1530 EST) "Hydrological dinosaurs to contaminant transport: Almost always incorporating hydrology into biogeochemistry research" McMaster Centre for Climate Change McMaster Faculty of Science *Carl was my first BSc student
