Events for August 10, 2022 - October 20, 2020
IIHR Special Summer Seminar: Venanzio Cichella
ZoomContact Laura Myers (laura-l-myers@uiowa.edu) for the Zoom link.
IIHR Special Summer Seminar: Caterina Lamuta
Zoom“Artificial Muscles for Robotics and Underwater Applications” Presented by: Caterina Lamuta Assistant Professor Department of Mechanical Engineering University of Iowa Contact Laura Myers (laura-l-myers@uiowa.edu) for the Zoom link.
Seminar: Moala Bannavti
ZoomIIHR’s Moala Bannavti, PhD candidate in Hornbuckle/Just labs, will present “Emission Characterization and Criteria for Remediation of Polychlorinated Biphenyls in Lower-Income Public Schools” as part of an ongoing seminar series sponsored by MIT Civil and Environmental Engineering. Please contact Kimberly Lebeck the Zoom information, date, and time.
Water-Quality Seminar
Zoom“Proposed Water Quality Index for Cornbelt Streams” Wednesday, Oct. 13, 3-4 pm Presenter: Chris Jones Jones is a research engineer at the University of Iowa’s IIHR—Hydroscience & Engineering. Hybrid sessions will be virtual and in-person at 1306 Elings Hall, 605 Bissell Road, on the Iowa State University campus. Sessions will be recorded and posted on […]
Exhibition Spotlight: A Century of IIHR Research on the Mississippi River (Part 1)
ZoomThis virtual program will focus on IIHR’s history of research and engineering on the Mississippi River and an overview of current watershed initiatives the 101-year-old institute is leading today. During part I of this two-part program, climate expert and IIHR Director Gabriele Villarini will introduce IIHR’s history of research and engineering on the Mississippi River. Following this introduction, Augustana College Research Associate Matthew Fockler will share his project, Two Mississippi — a historical and geographic investigation of the Upper Mississippi River since its greatest manmade alteration, the 9-Foot Channel Project. Two Mississippi is an invitation to step into and along the Upper Mississippi River and explore its past, present, and future. Fockler uses repeat photography, archival research, critical GIS mapping, and oral history to examine the dramatic human and ecological landscape changes that have occurred on the Upper Mississippi River since the 9-Foot Channel Project became reality. His Mississippi River research can be previewed at www.two-mississippi.com.