CSG John Russell Mather Paper of the Year Award

 

 

The Climate Specialty Group of the AAG seeks paper submissions for the CSG "John Russell Mather Paper of the Year Award." As a result of a generous donation, the winner will receive $250. Candidates must be CSG dues-paying members in the year of the competition, and be first author on co- or multi-authored papers. Only the first author is the winner of the prize. The paper must be accepted and/or published by a peer-reviewed technical journal (no books or book chapters). The paper should be accepted and/or published this calendar year. Judging criteria favors papers that represent a significant contribution to climate science, or papers utilizing innovative research approaches, analyses, and/or techniques. Only one award is granted each year (no awards given in some years). "Honorable mentions" may also be granted to significant papers that do not win the "Paper of the Year" award. Annual winners receive a commemorative plaque and a letter of citation, in addition to the cash award; honorable mention winners receive a letter of citation. The winning author is required to present the work in a special plenary-type session at the following year's annual meeting (approximately one-hour presentation followed by a panel discussion). Further, an announcement will be made at the CSG Business Meeting by the Awards Committee. The winner will be recognized at the AAG awards luncheon (CSG sponsors cost for attending luncheon). Winners are then ineligible for the award for the following five years.

All submitted papers will be judged by the CSG Paper of the Year Competition Committee which is comprised of CSG Lifetime Achievement Award winners and past "Paper of the Year" award winners. To enter the competition submit five copies (reprints or galleys) of the paper or e-mail a PDF to the CSG Honors Director: Dr. Steven Quiring (squiring@geog.tamu.edu), TAMU 3147, Department of Geography, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3147.

Application deadline is November 1, 2009.

 


 

PREVIOUS AWARD WINNERS

 

2009

   

Lei Meng (Texas A&M University)

with Steven Quiring

ŇA Comparison of Soil Moisture Models Using Soil Climate Analysis Network Observations."

Journal of Hydrometeorology 9:641-659

    (link to it here)


2008

 

Kevin Law (Marshall University)

with Jay S. Hobgood

ŇA Statistical Model to Forecast Short-Term Atlantic Hurricane Intensity."

Weather and Forecasting 22:967-980

    (link to it here)

 

2007

 

Mark D. Schwartz (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)

with Rein Ahas and Anto Aasa

ŇOnset of spring starting earlier across the Northern Hemisphere"

Global Change Biology 12:343-351

    (link to it here)

 

2006

   

Oliver W. Frauenfeld (University of Colorado)

with R.E. Davis and M.E. Mann

 

"A distinctly interdecadal signal of Pacific ocean-atmosphere interaction"

Journal of Climate 18:1709-1718

(link to it here)

 

 

2004

   

Robert E. Davis (University of Virginia)

with P.C. Knappenberger, W.M. Novicoff, and P.J. Michaels

 

"Decadal changes in summer mortality in U.S. cities"

International Journal of Biometeorology 47:166-175

(link to it here)

 

 

2003

   

Scott Robeson (Indiana University)

 

"Relationships between mean and standard deviation of air temperature: implications for global warming"

Climate Research 22:205-213

(link to it here)

  

  

2001

  

Franco Biondi (University of Nevada - Reno)

 

"North Pacific decdal climate variability since 1661"

Journal of Climate 14:5-10

(link to it here)