ABSTRACT DEADLINE: 6 August 2013 at 23:59ET/3:59+1 GMT.

Dear colleagues,  Last year's AGU Fog session was greatly enlivened by the
participation of plant ecologists, ecophysiologists, and microbiologists.
 This year we invite you once again to  join the discussion about the
air-sea-land-bio-anthro interface of fog and submit work that helps us
understand fog or the impacts from fog.  Are you an atmospheric
microbiologist looking for a convenient sampling location? Consider the
surfaces of fog droplets or its interstitials.  Are you an intertidal
ecologist studying thermal effects under climate change?  Fog might be your
friend, join us.

Fog Session (A033), AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, December 9 – 13, 2013
Fog: Atmosphere, biosphere, land, and ocean interactions

Abstract: Stratocumulus and fog define the climatology of the eastern
Pacific coast, and numerous other regions, impacting the hydrologic cycle
and the thermodynamic balance of ecosystems and urban environments. Factors
driving fog include atmospheric inversions, synoptic meteorology, SST, sea
spray, aerosol-cloud dynamics, topography, and land surface variables.
Understanding fog and biotic responses to fog require a diverse array of
measurements and models that link processes at multiple scales. We seek
presentations on physical, chemical, biological, and anthropogenic
processes that drive and are influenced by coastal or non-coastal fog using
process models; ground-based, airborne, or satellite observations; or
manipulative experiments.

http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2013/

https://fallmeeting.agu.org/2013/account/

Please contact any of the session conveners for more information:

Alicia Torregrosa ([email protected]); , Travis O'Brien ([email protected]);
Chris Still ([email protected]), and Ian Faloona (
[email protected]).

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[email protected]
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Alicia Torregrosa
Western Geographic Science Center
US Geological Survey
345 Middlefield Road MS 531
Menlo Park, CA 94025
office:650-329-4091 mobile:650-269-5044
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