AquaHacking 2018 information session
Join us on April 3, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. in RCH 306 for food, drinks and information about . Meet last year's winners, learn about the competition and this year's format, and meet like-minded individuals.Â

Join us on April 3, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. in RCH 306 for food, drinks and information about . Meet last year's winners, learn about the competition and this year's format, and meet like-minded individuals.Â

As part of the Water Institute's WaterTalks lecture series, Sharon Megdal, Director of The University of Arizona Water Resources Research Center, presents, "Groundwater governance and management research: Connecting researchers and practitioners."
Light refreshments will be provided.
As part of Ecohydrology's seminar series,  from Western University will be presenting, "Understanding the Effects of Phosphorus Concentration Dynamics on Benthic Primary Production using Artificial Stream Experiments."
Coffee will be provided.Â
A global photography exhibit created by and , and in partnership with the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµâ€™s Water Institute, is coming to  in Kitchener this spring.
As part of the Water Institute's WaterTalks lecture series, Ryan Walter, assistant professor in the Physics Department at California Polytechnic State University, presents, "What lies beneath: Internal waves in the nearshore coastal environment."
This course addresses the development of computational models of watershed hydrology in support of water resources management and scientific investigation. The full model development and application cycle is considered: pre-processing, understanding, and generating input forcing data; system discretization and algorithms for simulating hydrologic processes; parameter estimation; and interpreting model output in the context of often significant system uncertainty.
As part of the Water Institute's WaterTalks lecture series, Curtis Richardson, professor of Resource Ecology and Director of the Duke University Wetland Center, presents, "Decoding the Secrets of Carbon Preservation in Peatlands along a Boreal to Tropical Gradient from Minnesota to Peru."
°Õ³ó±ðÌý will welcome academics, thinkers and practitioners from around the world to present, discuss and highlight key issues and directions for change from scientific and policy perspectives, including data needs and how data can be acquired, successful public and private sector business models in different settings, political opportunities and obstacles, what the expressed human needs are, and where the knowledge gaps exist.
As part of the Water Institute's WaterTalks lecture series, Lovell Endowed Professor from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, will be presenting, "Modelling River Basins as Coupled Human and Natural Systems."