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CyberPaleo
Contributions on the future of the paleosciences, curated by the LinkedEarth team
Note from the editor

This blog invites contributions on the future of the paleosciences, curated by the LinkedEarth team. Aspects of technology, open science, artificial intelligence and other meta-aspects are welcome. We are particularly keen on contributions that help make the paleosciences relevant to assessments of current and future global change.

Editors
Go to the profile of LinkedEarth
LinkedEarth
An organization dedicated to manifesting the future of the paleosciences (the study of past environments, climates, and ecosystems)
Go to the profile of Deborah Khider
Deborah Khider
Research Scientist at the USC Information Sciences Institute - Data Science, AI, and paleoclimatology
Go to the profile of Nicholas Mckay
Go to the profile of Julien Emile-Geay
Julien Emile-Geay
Professor of Climate Science at the University of Southern California.
Writers
Go to the profile of LinkedEarth
LinkedEarth
An organization dedicated to manifesting the future of the paleosciences (the study of past environments, climates, and ecosystems)
Go to the profile of Deborah Khider
Deborah Khider
Research Scientist at the USC Information Sciences Institute - Data Science, AI, and paleoclimatology
Go to the profile of Nicholas Mckay
Go to the profile of Jordan Landers
Jordan Landers
Earth Science Graduate Student at the University of Southern California - data science, paleoclimate
Go to the profile of Julien Emile-Geay
Julien Emile-Geay
Professor of Climate Science at the University of Southern California.
Go to the profile of Kim Pevey
Kim Pevey
Senior Software Engineer at Quansight with a heart for Open Source
Go to the profile of Alexander James
Alexander James
Paleoclimatology PhD Candidate at the University of Southern California. Applying math and data science to better understand the history of our climate.