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"Canary" Film Screening, part of the EHI Earth Day Film Festival

Poster of a man standing in a distance looking in front of him at a very tall wall of ice  under blue skies with snow covered mountains further in a distance and snow, rock and dirt on the ground.  in the sky is an outline representing a map. Text at the tops in white says "The closest living thing to Indiana Jones." - Daniel Schrag, Harvard Geochemist Nature . Large text in yellow says Canary, and under it says in black: The fight for our future begins at 18,000 feet.
April 19, 2024
7:00PM - 9:00PM
University Hall, Room 0014

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2024-04-19 19:00:00 2024-04-19 21:00:00 "Canary" Film Screening, part of the EHI Earth Day Film Festival  Daring to seek Earth's history contained in glaciers atop the tallest mountains in the world, Doctor Lonnie Thompson's life's work evolves into a salvage mission to recover priceless historical records before they disappear forever.The film will be introduced by Lonnie Thompson, Distinguished University Professor in the School of Earth Sciences (and the researcher that this film is about!) who will remain afterward for a Q&A.This film is a contribution from Ohio State's Environmental History Initiative to the broader campus-wide Earth Day celebration. It is free and open to the public.Questions? Contact Neil Humphrey at humphrey.310@osu.edu. University Hall, Room 0014 Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center byrd-contact@osu.edu America/New_York public
Flyer of a man standing in front of a glacier looking up at it and text saying Canary and text The Environmental History Initiative Earth Day Film Festival with credits and  text April 19 7-9 pm University Hall 0014

Daring to seek Earth's history contained in glaciers atop the tallest mountains in the world, Doctor Lonnie Thompson's life's work evolves into a salvage mission to recover priceless historical records before they disappear forever.

The film will be introduced by Lonnie Thompson, Distinguished University Professor in the School of Earth Sciences (and the researcher that this film is about!) who will remain afterward for a Q&A.

This film is a contribution from Ohio State's Environmental History Initiative to the broader campus-wide Earth Day celebration. It is free and open to the public.

Questions? Contact Neil Humphrey at humphrey.310@osu.edu.

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