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of the year winter break from December 25-January 1. Impressive educational benefits include tuition-free Part-Time Study and Employee Degree Program, heavily discounted eCornell courses and certificate
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maintenance of experiments in field and greenhouse settings, data analysis, computer and server management consistent with the needs of data analysis, and writing and editing of scientific papers
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, establishment and maintenance of experiments in field and greenhouse settings, data analysis, computer and server management consistent with the needs of data analysis, and writing and editing of scientific
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agriculture. Developments in remote sensing, computer science and biogeochemistry support visions of cost-effective and reliable “natural climate solutions”. At the same time, there are hot technical and
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of the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat), collaborating with partners from the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The project builds on a strong foundation of
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on new challenges. This position resides with the Lab's BirdCast team in the Center for Avian Population Studies. The BirdFlow team is an interdisciplinary group of ecologists and computer scientists
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informatics-analytics approaches to solving urban infrastructure and its associated environment/health/economics and management problems. The CUTES research group brings together a world-class
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Christopher W Clark Postdoctoral Associate: Ecosystem-Scale Biodiversity Conservation in the Tropics
year position appointed annually, up to 3 years, contingent upon funding and performance. Additionally, a $10,000/year discretionary fund is provided to cover costs such as computing resources and travel
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researchers. We achieve this by producing scientific, computational, and big data resources that transform how we understand and protect the world around us. The Cornell Lab is home to a vibrant community of
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using mobile acoustic survey data. The project is in support of the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat), collaborating with partners from the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Fish and