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Announcements
(most recent on top): |
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I hope you enjoyed the class, and good luck in your future endeavors.
Feel free to e-mail me (ted@geog.ucsb.edu)
anytime to let me know what you're up to, and if you're still at UCSB, I
hope to see you around campus: I'll probably be at UCSB until spring
2009 or so. Thanks for being such great students! |
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> The other announcements,
and most of the course materials,
have been
removed from this web page because the class is over, but
e-mail me if you'd like to see
them again. |
GEOG 133 Course Description, from UCSB's Course Catalog:
"Description of tropical atmosphere. High and low frequency variability:
hurricanes, monsoons, El Niño, satellite observations and modeling."
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Ted Eckmann's Sections and Office Hours for
Spring Quarter, 2005 I never require
attendance, and you're welcome to
attend any combination of these that
you want.
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| WHEN: |
WHERE: |
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Discussion section: Monday 10:00 PM - 11:00 AM |
Ellison 2610 (Star Lab) |
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Discussion section: Monday
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM |
Ellison 2610 (Star Lab) |
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Office hours: Friday 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM |
At the tables in the
HSSB courtyard
(just outside where lecture meets) |
| Office hours also by appointment; see me before or after
class, or
e-mail me at
tedeckmann@bigfoot.com |
Wherever it's convenient for you |
Books you may find useful for GEOG 133:
Understanding Weather and Climate. (this is the GEOG 110 book)
by Edward Aguado, and James E. Burt, 3rd ed. 2004. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson Education. 560 p.
Meteorology Today : an introduction to weather,
climate, and the environment.
by C. Donald Ahrens, 6th ed. 2000. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole Pub.
528 p.
Our library has several earlier editions of each of these textbooks
available for regular loan. Additionally, ask your friends, or other
people in the class, and you should be able to find a copy of the GEOG 110
book to share.