Michael Evan Mann ( born December 28, 1965, Amherst, Mass.) Is an American climatologist and geophysicist who has contributed to developing a scientific understanding of climate change over the past two thousand years. He developed methods to find patterns in past climate changes and isolate signals from noise in the data. Emeritus Professor of the University of Pennsylvania . Actively acts in the media [1] .
| Michael Mann | |
|---|---|
| English Michael E. Mann | |
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | |
| A country | |
| Scientific field | Climatology |
| Place of work | |
| Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley Yale university |
| Academic degree | |
| Awards and prizes | [d] ( 2012 ) Tyler Award for Environmental Achievements ( 2019 ) [d] ( 2012 ) [d] [d] ( 2018 ) [d] ( 2017 ) [d] ( 2013 ) [d] ( 2013 ) |
| Site | Mann website |
In a 1998 article, together with Raymond Bradley and Malcolm Hughes, he presented statistical methods for finding regional variations in climate reconstruction over the past 600 years. In 1999, together with the same co-authors, he used these methods for climate reconstruction in the last thousand years. The schedule from this work for its peculiar form was nicknamed "the ".
One of the eight leading authors of the chapter of the Third IPCC Assessment Report, published in 2001 [2] . Co-founder of .
He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley (Bachelor of Physics and Applied Mathematics). He received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1998. Fello of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2015) and the American Geophysical Union (2012).
Author of over 200 peer-reviewed publications.
Awards and honors
- Philip M. Orville Prize, Yale University (1997) - for the thesis
- NOAA Outstanding Scientific Publication (2002)
- AAG John Russell Mather Paper of the Year (2006)
- (2012)
- NCSE Friend of the Planet Award (2014, among the first to be awarded)
- Stephen H. Schneider Award for Outstanding Climate Science Communication (2017) [3]
- 'James H. Shea Award (2017)
- Introduced in Green Industry Hall of Fame (2017)
- AAAS Public Engagement with Science Award (2018) [1]
- AGU Climate Communication Prize (2018)
- Tyler Award (2019)
Notes
Links
- The blog RealClimate