Observatoriet_Kongsberg

Building state of the art ocean observatories

13. October 2014

The technology company Kongsberg Maritime is building two ocean observatories for CAGE. Observatories will be …

GIMS_Kamilla_Sandra_feature

CAGE elected to host international conference

2. October 2014

This years conference on gas in marine sediments (GIMS12) in Taiwan was successful for two …

Gulf Stream_NASA

The Gulf Stream kept going during the last Ice Age

12. September 2014

The warm Atlantic water continued to flow into the icy Nordic seas during the coldest …

Besøk fra stortingsrepresentantene

Members of Norwegian Parliament visit CAGE

8. September 2014

Several members of the Norwegian Parliament attended a local government conference in Tromsø this weekend. …

Aircraft_campaign 2014

Using ship, aircraft in search for methane emissions

27. August 2014

The amount of methane in the atmosphere is increasing. Is the seabed one of the …

Angela Merkel_frontpage

Research Vessel Sonne Christened by Angela Merkel

20. August 2014

German Chancellor Angela Merkel christened a brand new research vessel in July. In attendance was CAGE …

Giuliana Panieri

The changing Arctic

29. April 2014

  CAGE scientists took part in the 2014 European Geosciences Union (EGU)  in Vienna, Austria, …

Natural Gas Hydrate Systems Gordon Research Conference

28. April 2014

Natural Gas Hydrate Systems Gordon Research Conference was held on March 23-28, 2014 in Galveston, …

Sunil

Ocean warming release methane from gas hydrates

28. April 2014

Sunil Vadakkepuliyambatta recently defended his doctoral thesis entitled: “Sub-seabed fluid-flow systems and gas hydrates of …

Methane release in the Arctic and global warming

CAGE contributes to new findings on methane release from the seabed

21. January 2014

A new Science paper with contributions from CAGE presents new findings on methane release and global warming.

Cristmas decoration, Silver beautifful balls

Season’s greetings!

19. December 2013

Merry Christmas to you all and our best wishes for a safe and prosperous New Year!

IODP_labwork

CAGE researchers clarify the Arctic’s role in global climate during the Pliocene

11. December 2013

The relation between the Arctic and global warming has attracted public awareness over the past years. To really understand the future challenge of climate change we need to understand the climate of the past. CAGE researchers have contributed to a recent publication in Earth and Planetary Science Letters which presents new knowledge of the Arctic climate in the Pliocene.

Icebergs in Ilulissat

CAGE congratulate the Bjerknes Centre with an ERC Synergy Grant

10. December 2013

The Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research (BCCR) in Bergen is to receive 50-60 million NOK from the European Research Council (ERC). CAGE wish to congratulate them with this prestigious grant.

Kronebreen Svalbard

CAGE researcher presents new climate knowledge in Nature

4. December 2013

Melting glaciers and rising sea levels are certainly not new phenomena. Climate change was dramatic even during the last ice age, says Professor Tine Rasmussen.

CAGE-åpning_5

CAGE is officially opened

25. November 2013

CAGE was officially opened on Friday November 22.

Pavel

New guest student at CAGE

20. November 2013

Russian PhD candidate Pavel Serov from Saint-Petersburg State University will be spending the next year as part of the CAGE research team.

Anna Silyakova

A wider perspective

5. September 2013

CAGE’s new researcher Anna Silyakova wants to investigate the Arctic with an interdisciplinary eye.

Joel Johnson

– A unique opportunity

5. September 2013

Associate professor Joel Johnson from the University of New Hampshire (UNH) looks forward to spending a year as visiting professor at CAGE.

Giuliana Panieri

From Bologna to Tromsø

4. September 2013

The opportunity to be part of CAGE inspired Italian Giuliana Panieri to bring her family of four to Northern Norway.

Japanese First to Extract Gas from Undersea Hydrate Reservoir

1. April 2013

A revised map of subsea permafrost in the Kara Sea reveals permafrost has degraded more significantly than previously thought.