Duane Froese
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tephrafan.bsky.social
Duane Froese
@tephrafan.bsky.social

naturalist | professor | ualberta | northern research | permafrost | Quat Geo | working with northern communities | PACS Lab | Rett Syndrome | he/him

Environmental science 34%
Geology 29%
Pinned
I'm a Quaternary/permafrost geoscientist focused on ground ice, its vulnerability, and the exceptional things found in permafrost. I work with northern govts and communities to understand permafrost change with occasional digressions into the paleo world of permafrost.

A new exposure on Sulphur.

Would be isotopically so interesting if accessible.

Crazy ice wedge day. 10-12 m high syngenetic ice wedge spanning the Late Pleistocene—early Holocene boundary. #klondike #permasfrost

Reposted by Duane Froese

🙏🏽 Thank you Duane Froese (Professor, Univ of Alberta, @tephrafan.bsky.social) for your cover photo of INSTAAR's peer-reviewed, open-access journal Arctic, Antarctic, & Alpine Research. The area depicted is a rich source of Ice Age vertebrate fossils & paleoenvironmental information. More below ⬇️
Each AAAR issue features a cover image that is significant to the contents in that issue. This year has @DuaneFroese’s photo of the Old Crow River within the Vuntut Gwitchin Traditional Territory. Read more on the photo & why it’s the 2024 cover here: doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2024.2308444
About the Cover - Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, Volume 56(1)
Published in Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research: An Interdisciplinary Journal (Vol. 56, No. 1, 2024)
doi.org

Reposted by Duane Froese

Really pleased to share our new paper in GRL, documenting evidence of multiple Quaternary surface-rupturing earthquakes on the Tintina fault in the Yukon.

doi.org/10.1029/2025...

@faultydata.bsky.social @earthquakeguy.bsky.social @thatfaultguy.bsky.social @tephrafan.bsky.social
Large Surface‐Rupturing Earthquakes and a >12 kyr, Open Interseismic Interval on the Tintina Fault, Yukon
We provide the first conclusive evidence of numerous large (>Mw 7.5) surface-rupturing earthquakes in the Quaternary on the Tintina fault Offsets to Early and Middle Pleistocene glaciofluvial ter...
doi.org

Great new paper on long recurrence interval earthquakes along the Tintina Fault in central Yukon, led by @theronfinley.bsky.social. A nice merging of the rich glacial record of the Yukon with modern seismicity data to understand potential risk in northern Canada. Great work Theron!

New paper with a large cast, but including a lot of permafrost, preserved horse fossils from the Yukon— work we did collaboratively over many years. Nice to see this out. Paper led by indigenous authors, highlighting deep connections horses and communities.

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

I laughed. And probably best it’s a different Brent.

The Ukrainian Sherpa UTV all conditions buggy, including amphibious. A spring fieldwork dream…not ours just interloping on their ride with some frozen materials.

Winning!

Reposted by Duane Froese

We're thrilled to share that CJES, a @cdnsciencepub.com journal, will be joining the BlueSky community soon! Stay tuned for updates as we prepare to connect, share, and engage with researchers and science enthusiasts in this exciting space. See you soon! 🌟 #ScienceCommunication #BlueSky

I bought my copy from Aquila books in Calgary. Not sure if they’re still there.

Not sure if you ever read Lew Green’s excellent ‘the Boundary Hunter’s’ about A.O.Wheeler, Ogilvie and the late 19th and early 20th C surveyors of the AK border. 141st Longitude and AK panhandle. It’s a great read.

There’s a book by Frankfurt (it’s quite short) called On Bullshit that’s worth a read.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Bull...
On Bullshit - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org

New paper from Ben Stoker’s PhD with Martin Margold on the ice flow history of the NW Laurentide Ice Sheet. Not for the faint— clicking in at 41p. A huge effort to compile and organize into a consistent ice sheet history with contributions from many.

tc.copernicus.org/articles/19/...
Ice flow dynamics of the northwestern Laurentide Ice Sheet during the last deglaciation
Abstract. Reconstructions of palaeo-ice-stream activity provide insight into the processes governing ice stream evolution over millennial timescales. The northwestern sector of the Laurentide Ice Shee...
tc.copernicus.org

I try to stick to work here, but the ongoing impasse between Edmonton Pub. Schools and the Educational Assistants and Support Workers has gone on for more than a month, affecting our family. More than 1000 kids are being denied access to education. I wrote an Op-Ed @edmontonjournal.bsky.social
Opinion: Edmonton students with disabilities abandoned during strike
For more than a month, approximately 1,200 Edmonton students with disabilities have been denied their fundamental right to education.
edmontonjournal.com

Yes. And I doubt they will ever go back. Mixed feelings about it. It’s definitely efficient. Though this year with some complex family needs it was welcome.

Today I finished my third (and final) year of #NSERC Geosciences Eval group. It’s a lot of work, but an enjoyable and rewarding form of service. A remarkable breadth of high quality thoughtful work, and a fair and consistent evaluation process in my experience.

In a crazy multiverse sort of way, there will be those that have greater success with changes at NSF.

Will the Grievious Angels ever come west?


Behind a paywall but a nice profile of Beth Shapiro. We’ve been friends and worked together for 25 or so years. Always creative and now one of the biggest critics of de-extinction is redefining what it might mean for conservation genetics. Worth a read.

www.washingtonpost.com/climate-envi...
The dodo bird is extinct. This scientist says she can bring it back.
The company she works for is betting millions it can realize a once-far-fetched idea of “de-extinction.”
www.washingtonpost.com

A very cool ancient eDNA paper from Tyler Murchie’s PhD that shows the co-occurrence of distinctive plant, animal, microbial and even gut microbiome communities associated with megafauna and their extinction/extirpation.

onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Permafrost microbial communities follow shifts in vegetation, soils, and megafauna extinctions in Late Pleistocene NW North America
Using sedimentary ancient DNA from permafrost sediments deposited between 30,000 and 4000 years ago in Yukon, Canada, we explore whether there were changes in microbial communities paralleling the tr...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com

View of the Mountain River joining the Mackenzie (Deh Cho) upstream of Fort Good Hope. The Mackenzie (looking north) widens with the addition of the coarse load, becoming braided upstream of the Ramparts. #Sahtu region, #NWT

Is it really? Conspiracy nonsense.

🙏🏽 Thank you Duane Froese (Professor, Univ of Alberta, @tephrafan.bsky.social) for your cover photo of INSTAAR's peer-reviewed, open-access journal Arctic, Antarctic, & Alpine Research. The area depicted is a rich source of Ice Age vertebrate fossils & paleoenvironmental information. More below ⬇️
Each AAAR issue features a cover image that is significant to the contents in that issue. This year has @DuaneFroese’s photo of the Old Crow River within the Vuntut Gwitchin Traditional Territory. Read more on the photo & why it’s the 2024 cover here: doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2024.2308444

#FossilFriday appreciation of our cover of the new #Beringia AAAR collection, a fossil rich locale on the Old Crow R. in Vuntut Gwitchin Territory. A river trip with 3 (then) graduate students. More than 1000 Pleist fossils: 70+ mammoth teeth, horses, hyena, camel, giant beaver, sloth and caribou.

That format helps a lot. I still get them to write an intro, lit review/methods chapter. Then the results chapter is the draft manuscript, followed by conclusions. Leads to some repetition, but that’s pretty common in our department. I also make sure they have very complete data appendices.