Issue 171:September/October 2002: SANCOR Notice Board

  
SANCOR Newsletter Issue #171: September 2002

 

SANCOR NOTICE BOARD

POGO SCOR Fellowship
The SANCOR Community would like to congratulate Mathieu Rouault (University of Cape Town – Oceanography Department) for receiving a position from the POGO SCOR Fellowship to participate in the PIRATA Program on the French Cruise in the Tropical Atlantic. As part of the cruise, Mathieu will be trained in deploying an ATLAS mooring. Mathieu leaves in December. Well done and safe travels.

SOUTH AFRICAN MARINE & COASTAL SCIENTIST ABROAD
 
John Taunton-Clark, who for many years was a physical oceanographer on the 2nd floor at MCM, until he left in about 1995.
John now lives in Auckland, NZ. He married Barbra, a New Zealander, and they have two daughters. He works for the NZ Ministry of Fisheries, and is responsible for managing the inshore fisheries [shellfish (not lobster) and finfish (mostly marine, but some freshwater species)] in the northern half of the North Island. He leads a team of 4 fisheries management staff, and is currently studying for an MBA part-time.TAUNTONJ@fish.govt.nz
 
Scirus –
the award-winning scientific Web Search Engine
http://scirus.q0.nl/R/720150/0.PTS..F/24
,
Simply go tohttp://scirus.q0.nl/R/720150/0.PTS..F/24, type a keyword of your choice in the search box and click on the search button. You will be amazed how many useful results you get. Scirus was voted Best Specialty Search Engine in the prestigious Search Engine Watch Awards 2001, which recognize outstanding achievements in Web searching. The Best Specialty Search Engine Award is Locating scientific information on the Web is easy with Scirus because it targets scientific information only. Scirus reveals a wealth of scientific information from Web sources (e.g. university sites, author homepages, company homepages), and databases (e.g. ScienceDirect articles, MEDLINE abstracts, USPTO p- finds the most peer-reviewed articles by delving deep into major databases. Scirus finds more peer-reviewed articles than any other search engine, giving you greater access to key sources of information.
 
The 2001/2 SAIAB annual report is now online at
The 4th World Fisheries Congress
Where? Vancouver, Canada
When? May 2 - 6, 2004

Dr Whitfield receives long service award
 
Dr Alan Whitfield (left) accepts his long service award from Prof Paul Skelton, Managing Director of SAIAB
Dr Alan Whitfield, Deputy Director of the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB), a National Facility of the National Research Foundation, received an award for 15 years service to the Institute.Dr Whitfield was appointed to the staff of the then JLB Smith Institute of Ichthyology in July 1987 as a Senior Ichthyologist with a particular interest in estuarine ecology. In October 1995, he was promoted to Assistant Director of the Institute and three years later appointed as Deputy Director, the position he currently holds. Dr Whitfield also holds the position of Research Manager at SAIAB and according to the NRF rating system, is the highest rated scientist within the Institute.