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pmip3:wg:p2f:eguminutes [2013/04/26 08:51] jules |
pmip3:wg:p2f:eguminutes [2013/05/10 06:05] (current) jules |
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Kerim Nisancioglu (kerim@bjerknes.uib.no) \\ | Kerim Nisancioglu (kerim@bjerknes.uib.no) \\ | ||
Alistair Hind (alistair.hind@natgeo.su.se) \\ | Alistair Hind (alistair.hind@natgeo.su.se) \\ | ||
+ | Johann Jungclaus (johann.jungclaus@zmaw.de) \\ | ||
+ | Quizhen Yin (qiuzhen.yin@uclouvain.be) \\ | ||
To kick things off, Julia presented her vision of what P2F is for: *not* the study of the past, but rather the use of the past to improve/constrain/validate future predictions/projections. There was some debate over the name, particularly a possible clash with the existing EU project "Past4Future" <http://www.past4future.eu/>. However "The Past4Future project investigates the climate and environment of past warm periods" and will end in 2014. P2F has a broader remit in terms of periods considered, and an explicitly future-oriented focus. | To kick things off, Julia presented her vision of what P2F is for: *not* the study of the past, but rather the use of the past to improve/constrain/validate future predictions/projections. There was some debate over the name, particularly a possible clash with the existing EU project "Past4Future" <http://www.past4future.eu/>. However "The Past4Future project investigates the climate and environment of past warm periods" and will end in 2014. P2F has a broader remit in terms of periods considered, and an explicitly future-oriented focus. |