Aftenposten, 12/11/2019. Photo credit: Erling Svensen
OUTREACH
See the TORKSETROMMING PAGE FOR SOME UPCOMING EVENTS
Invited webinar, input to the new National Museum of Cod, Museum Nord SKREI Research Centre – Mar. 7, 2023
Invited talk, Transborder Café: In Cod We Trust (watch recording from 09:10-18:30; also below), Barents Spektakel, Feb. 28, 2023
Invited public lecture, What can listening to cod tell us about their communities and how we impact them?, Barents Spektakel, Feb. 25, 2023
Invited panelist, Open Meeting About the Fish that Disappears: ‘Torsken i Skagerrak er borte. Hvorfor?’,
Langesund Bad, Norway – Sept. 21, 2022
Invited guest, Women in Ecology & Evolution Podcast "The Case for Open Science" panel – May 4, 2022
Co-creator/Lead Researcher, TORSKETROMMING scientific/artistic project – 2018-present
Invited guest, Women in Ecology & Evolution Podcast "Paper in Focus" segment – Oct. 23, 2020
Author, Op-ed in Agderposten about cod dialects – Oct. 5, 2020
Invited Speaker, Young Researcher's Night Kristiansand – Sept. 25, 2020
Feature guest, TORSKE-TV (‘COD-TV’), cod spawning live-stream with article and video interviews by the Institute of Marine Research, picked up by Sweden’s Fishermen Organisation and Diving Magazine – Mar. 2020
Exhibitor, TORSKETROMMING (‘COD DRUMMING’), Life Sciences Exhibition at the Technical Museum of Oslo – Feb. 2020
Author, Chronicle in Aftenposten (Norway’s largest newspaper) about the cod crisis – Nov. 12, 2019
Exhibitor, Torsk og du! (‘Cod and you!’), Oslo Science Expo – 2019
Music Coordinator, Save The Arctic Oslo – 2017
Music Director & Organizing Committee member, March for Science Oslo – 2017
Creator of an original music video to raise awareness for the March for Science worldwide (see below) – 2017
Author, popular science article for Oomen & Hutchings 2017, in Medium – 2017
Featured in a Norwegian TV Series 'Havforskerne' ('Oceanographers') episode about Atlantic cod – 2015
Judging team captain at the Canada Wide Science Fair, Peterborough, ON – 2010
Featured on Daily Planet's 'Science in the City' segment about the Crime Scene House at Trent University – 2009
Forensic Science Enrichment Camp leader, Trent University – Summer 2009
Invited talk, Transborder Café: In Cod We Trust (watch recording from 09:10-18:30; also below), Barents Spektakel, Feb. 28, 2023
Invited public lecture, What can listening to cod tell us about their communities and how we impact them?, Barents Spektakel, Feb. 25, 2023
Invited panelist, Open Meeting About the Fish that Disappears: ‘Torsken i Skagerrak er borte. Hvorfor?’,
Langesund Bad, Norway – Sept. 21, 2022
Invited guest, Women in Ecology & Evolution Podcast "The Case for Open Science" panel – May 4, 2022
Co-creator/Lead Researcher, TORSKETROMMING scientific/artistic project – 2018-present
Invited guest, Women in Ecology & Evolution Podcast "Paper in Focus" segment – Oct. 23, 2020
Author, Op-ed in Agderposten about cod dialects – Oct. 5, 2020
Invited Speaker, Young Researcher's Night Kristiansand – Sept. 25, 2020
Feature guest, TORSKE-TV (‘COD-TV’), cod spawning live-stream with article and video interviews by the Institute of Marine Research, picked up by Sweden’s Fishermen Organisation and Diving Magazine – Mar. 2020
Exhibitor, TORSKETROMMING (‘COD DRUMMING’), Life Sciences Exhibition at the Technical Museum of Oslo – Feb. 2020
Author, Chronicle in Aftenposten (Norway’s largest newspaper) about the cod crisis – Nov. 12, 2019
Exhibitor, Torsk og du! (‘Cod and you!’), Oslo Science Expo – 2019
Music Coordinator, Save The Arctic Oslo – 2017
Music Director & Organizing Committee member, March for Science Oslo – 2017
Creator of an original music video to raise awareness for the March for Science worldwide (see below) – 2017
Author, popular science article for Oomen & Hutchings 2017, in Medium – 2017
Featured in a Norwegian TV Series 'Havforskerne' ('Oceanographers') episode about Atlantic cod – 2015
Judging team captain at the Canada Wide Science Fair, Peterborough, ON – 2010
Featured on Daily Planet's 'Science in the City' segment about the Crime Scene House at Trent University – 2009
Forensic Science Enrichment Camp leader, Trent University – Summer 2009
We respectfully acknowledge that UNB stands on the unsurrendered and unceded traditional Wolastoqey (WOOL-US-TOOK-WAY) land. The lands of Wabanaki (WAH-BAH-NAH-KEE) people are recognized in a series of Peace and Friendship Treaties to establish an ongoing relationship of peace, friendship and mutual respect between equal nations. The river that connects our two campuses is known as Wolastoq (WOOL-LUSS-TOOK), along which live Wolastoqiyik (WOOL-US-TOO-GWEEG) – the people of the beautiful and bountiful river. Wolastoq (WOOL-LUSS-TOOK) is also called the St. John River.
All photos are mine unless otherwise specified. This site is optimized for desktop/tablet, so strange things can happen on a mobile/tablet.
All photos are mine unless otherwise specified. This site is optimized for desktop/tablet, so strange things can happen on a mobile/tablet.