
Join Cool Science for Science on Tap every 2nd Monday of the month [except this month- see below] at Jack Quinn’s Irish Pub & Restaurant in downtown Colorado Springs. Presenters begin at 6:30 pm and typically speak for 60-90 minutes including Q&A, with food and drink available beginning at 6:00 pm. A wide variety of fascinating topics are presented by local scientists for informal discussion, and the relaxed atmosphere encourages anyone and everyone to come explore the latest ideas in science and technology. From practical to theoretical, the presentations and group interactions provide a fun and interesting way to gain an understanding of the world around us.
Join Cool Science for Science on Tap every 2nd Monday of the month [except this month- see below] at Jack Quinn’s Irish Pub & Restaurant in downtown Colorado Springs. Presenters begin at 6:30 pm and typically speak for 60-90 minutes including Q&A, with food and drink available beginning at 6:00 pm. A wide variety of fascinating topics are presented by local scientists for informal discussion, and the relaxed atmosphere encourages anyone and everyone to come explore the latest ideas in science and technology. From practical to theoretical, the presentations and group interactions provide a fun and interesting way to gain an understanding of the world around us.
Next up: Monday, September 11, 2023 at 6:30 pm
Climate Change in Colorado
Kyle Mozley, Meteorologist, National Weather Service, Pueblo CO
Summary: How will climate change affect Colorado? This talk will focus on the National Weather Service's current assessments of the impact on snow, water supply, drought, agriculture, ecological, recreational and how they all tie into the economy. Everything relating to climate change is interconnected, and will impact each of us differently.
Kyle received his BS from the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma. His professional career began in 2004, as a mission forecaster for the US Space and MIssile Defense Command on Kwajalein Atoll, Republic of the Marshall Islands where he became interested in large scale climate patterns such as El Nino/La NIna. In 2007, he was hired at the National Weather Service office in Reno, NV, and in 2009, promoted from an intern to a forecaster at the National Weather Service in Pueblo, CO. He enjoys the meteorology of southern CO, with opportunities for summer convection, fire weather, and winter weather while also researching El Nino predictions and teleconnections and mountain precipitation.