Congratulations to Lyna Lapointe Elmrabti and Gautier Davesne who have won a prize for their speeches at the research day of graduate students in geography of the Université de Montréal (Géodiversité).

April 15, 2015 in post by Kate G.

Lyna , M.Sc. student, supervised by Julie Talbot and co-supervised by Daniel Fortier, presented her research on the apparent climate and ecological change during the late Pleistocene in northern Alaska (Itkillik River Yedoma). Lyna won the prize for best science outreach awarded by the Fonds d’investissement des cycles supérieurs de l’Université de Montréal (FISCUM).

Gautier , M.Sc. student, supervised by Daniel Fortier, presented his work on the spatio-temporal evolution of the marginal alpine permafrost body on the Chic-Chocs Mountains. Gautier won the prize for best oral presentation in physical geography awarded by the Association des Étudiant(e)s des cycles supérieurs en Géographie de l’Université de Montréal (AÉÉCSGUM).

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Congratulations to Lyna Lapointe Elmrabti and Gautier Davesne who have won a prize for their speeches at the research day of graduate students in geography of the Université de Montréal (Géodiversité). by Geocryolab is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License .