2018

Personal Information Collection Statement

When you use this mobile application, we will have record of your Domain Name Server address and the contents you have browsed. This information may be used by us for statistical purpose only.

Policy on Personal Data

For the University's policy on personal data, please visit http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/policy/pdo/en/

Privacy Policy

The Jockey Club Museum of Climate Change of The Chinese University of Hong Kong (hereafter "the MoCC") built the MoCC Mobile App app as a Free app. This SERVICE is provided by the MoCC at no cost and is intended for use as is.

This page is used to inform visitors regarding our policies with the collection, use, and disclosure of Personal Information if anyone decided to use our Service.

If you choose to use our Service, then you agree to the collection and use of information in relation to this policy. The Personal Information that we collect is used for providing and improving the Service. We will not use or share your information with anyone except as described in this Privacy Policy.

The terms used in this Privacy Policy have the same meanings as in our Terms and Conditions, which is accessible at Jockey Club Museum of Climate Change Mobile App unless otherwise defined in this Privacy Policy.

Information Collection and Use

For a better experience, while using our Service, we may require you to provide us with certain personally identifiable information, including but not limited to Email Address, your Domain Name Server address and the pages you have visited. The information that we request will be retained by us and used as described in this privacy policy. For the University's policy on personal data, please click here.

The app does use third party services that may collect information used to identify you.

Link to privacy policy of third party service providers used by the app

Log Data

We want to inform you that whenever you use our Service, in a case of an error in the app we collect data and information (through third party products) on your phone called Log Data. This Log Data may include information such as your device Internet Protocol (“IP”) address, device name, operating system version, the configuration of the app when utilizing our Service, the time and date of your use of the Service, and other statistics.

Cookies

Cookies are files with a small amount of data that are commonly used as anonymous unique identifiers. These are sent to your browser from the websites that you visit and are stored on your device's internal memory.

This Service does not use these “cookies” explicitly. However, the app may use third party code and libraries that use “cookies” to collect information and improve their services. You have the option to either accept or refuse these cookies and know when a cookie is being sent to your device. If you choose to refuse our cookies, you may not be able to use some portions of this Service.

Service Providers

We may employ third-party companies and individuals due to the following reasons:

  • To facilitate our Service;
  • To provide the Service on our behalf;
  • To perform Service-related services; or
  • To assist us in analyzing how our Service is used.

We want to inform users of this Service that these third parties have access to your Personal Information. The reason is to perform the tasks assigned to them on our behalf. However, they are obligated not to disclose or use the information for any other purpose.

Security

We value your trust in providing us your Personal Information, thus we are striving to use commercially acceptable means of protecting it. But remember that no method of transmission over the internet, or method of electronic storage is 100% secure and reliable, and we cannot guarantee its absolute security.

Links to Other Sites

This Service may contain links to other sites. If you click on a third-party link, you will be directed to that site. Note that these external sites are not operated by us. Therefore, we strongly advise you to review the Privacy Policy of these websites. We have no control over and assume no responsibility for the content, privacy policies, or practices of any third-party sites or services.

Changes to This Privacy Policy

We may update our Privacy Policy from time to time. Thus, you are advised to review this page periodically for any changes. We will notify you of any changes by posting the new Privacy Policy on this page. These changes are effective immediately after they are posted on this page.

Contact Us

If you have any questions or suggestions about our Privacy Policy, do not hesitate to contact us at mocc@cuhk.edu.hk.

收集個人資料聲明

我們會記錄使用本手機應用程式者的域名伺服器地址和曾瀏覽的內容,此等資料僅供統計之用。

個人資料政策

有關本校處理個人資料的政策,請瀏覽http://www.cuhk.edu.hk/policy/pdo/b5/

專題展覽

「南緯60°以南」

2018年8月30日至11月30日

 

Visitor Information

Exhibition Period: 22 March – 30 June 2018 (closed on Wednesdays, Sundays and public holidays)

Opening hours: 9:30 am – 5:00 pm

Venue: Jockey Club Museum of Climate Change, Yasumoto International Academic Park 8/F, CUHK (Near Exit D, MTR University Station)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Asia

Glaciers in Asia are known to many as the ‘Third Pole’ due to the fact that high mountains of Asia hold the largest frozen water outside the polar areas. They are an invaluable water resource, feeding many of the world’s great rivers, including the Ganges.

This water resource, however, is a risk under the current trend of global warming. Asian mountain glaciers will lose over one third of their mass by the end of this century as a result of global warming, affecting millions of people who rely on them for fresh water, a study finds.

 

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Sabalan Glacier, Iran – Klaus Thymann (2014)

The glacier region of Sabalan rests on an inactive stratovolcano that rises to a height of 4,811 metres in the north-western part of Iran. The highest peaks of the mountains, known as Mount Sabalan, is a crater lake which is covered with ice from September through to June the next year.

Europe

Many of the glaciers in continental Europe develop on mountain ranges: The Alps, the Great Caucasus range, the Scandinavian mountains, Polar Ural and the Pyrenees. Glaciers on Iceland and Svalbard exist on lower altitudes, and exist due to their proximities to the North Pole.

The vast majority of glaciers in Europe are retreating. Those in the Alps have lost half of their volumes since 1900, with clear acceleration since the 1980s. Glacier retreat in Europe is expected to continue in the future.

 

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Glacier Du Baoumet, France – Scott Conarroe (2015)

Sunrise shot of Glacier Du Baoumet. In places on the Alps, the borders of Switzerland, Italy, Austria and France are based on watershed. As global warming shrinks the glaciers, so does the watershed shift. The alpine landscapes no longer conform to borders established in the last century.

 

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Esmarkbreen, Svalbard – Corey Arnold (2013)

The front of Esmarkbreen, a tidal glacier on the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard in the Arctic Ocean. The glacier was named Professor Jens Esmark (1763–1839), a Danish-Norwegian pioneer in glacial geology, who was the first to present convincing evidence for a glaciation in northern Europe.

South America

The glaciers in South America develop exclusively on the Andes; many on steep slopes and peaks above elevations of 5,000 metres. One of the most concerned region is the tropical Andes (Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia), where 99% of the world’s tropical glaciers occur. These tropical glaciers are regarded as among the most sensitive indicators of climate change on the planet, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Being a key aspect of the region’s water cycle, these glaciers have since the 1970s shrunk by 30–50%, an unprecedented rate in the past 300 years.

 

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Mount Illimani, Bolivia – Klaus Thymann (2013)

Between the Pacific and the spine of the Andes, which curves through the southwest of the country, lies the vast, arid Andean Plateau. It is home to the city La Paz, and the grasses of the Altiplano Highlands of Bolivia. Further east, the grasslands and dry deserts give way to towering mountains and glaciers, and hidden by the forbidding Andean peaks is the Amazon basin.

Nestled within the Cordillera Real Range is La Paz, the world’s highest capital city at 3,640 metres above sea level. The city with a backdrop of peaks above 5,000 metres, including Mount Illimani, the second highest peak of Bolivia, is sustained by the glacial meltwater runoff. As glaciers recede the landlocked country is losing a vital resource that is not only used for water consumption but also contributes to forestry and agriculture, indigenous communities’ livelihood, and hydroelectric power generation.

North America

Glaciers in North America exist in both the United States and Canada, as well as in Greenland. Many of these glaciers are well monitored and designated as protected areas of National Parks in the United States and Canada. Albeit protected, many of these areas, if not all, are still affected by climate change. One of such areas are Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest in the United States.

 

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Mount Baker, USA – Peter Funch (2014)

Mount Baker, located in Washington State, USA, is a unique place where the effects of climate change can be seen from the accumulation of over a century’s worth of photographic documentation in tourist memorabilia. Following in the footsteps of Ansel Adams, Funch’s replica images of the existing collection of postcards and archival photography provide a decisive juxtaposition that highlights how the landscape has changed over time.

 

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Helheim and Fenris Glaciers, Greenland – Klaus Thymann (2012) and Keld Milthers (1933)

In the early 20th Century, Denmark was in dispute with Norway over the sovereignty of eastern Greenland. To substantiate its claim, Denmark set forth expeditions to survey the remote region, including an aerial photograph survey by Danish explorer Keld Milthers in 1933. The aerial photographs, which were eventually rediscovered by Kurt Kjær of the Natural History Museum of Denmark in 2009, clearly outlined Greenland’s coasts, as well as the continent’s glaciers.

Collaborating with Kjær and the archive, Klaus Thymann revisited Helheim and Fenris Glaciers in East Greenland in 2012 to replicate the aerial photographs. The new photographs were taken same time of year as did Keld Milthers so that the historic and modern photographs can be compared directly. They demonstrate how the glaciers have retreated over 70 years.

 

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Jakobshavn Glacier, Greenland – Klaus Thymann (2009)

Shot out of an open door on a hovering helicopter, the image shows the front of the Jakobshavn Glacier in Greenland. The wall is about 70 metres high. This glacier is among, if not the most, active in the world, producing some 10% of all of Greenland’s icebergs. The glacier moves forward at an average pace of 20 metres per day.

Africa

Resembling those in South America, glaciers in Africa are altitude related. Occurring in high mountains and close to the equator, they are very sensitive to temperature changes and therefore to global warming. Some believe that Africa is likely to be the first continent to be glacier-free due to climate change.

 

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Lewis Glacier, Kenya – Simon Norfolk (2014)

Mount Kenya used to host many glaciers, this is no longer so. As a visual way of showing glacier retreat, Simon Norfolk used a self-made fire torch and a long exposure to demarcate the line to which a glacier once extended.

Mount Kenya is an extinct 5,199-metre volcano and this series intends to photographically re-awaken the mountain’s magma heart. The ‘Fire versus Ice’ metaphor is poignant owing to the trail of light being made from petroleum; the only evidence in these images that this glacier’s retreat is believed to be due to man-made climate change.

 

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Speke Glacier, Uganda – Klaus Thymann (2012)

On the border of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, are the Rwenzori Mountains. This UNESCO-listed national park is home to six peaks above 4,600 metres, as the highest source of the Nile, they are also known as ‘The Mountains of the Moon’. Barely explored until the turn of the 20th Century it is estimated the glaciers will completely disappear within the next 15 years.

In 1906, there were 43 glaciers in the region; now only half remain and with a total coverage area of less than one square kilometre. The mountains are also home to 177 species of bird and mammals and an abundance of unusual flora. The tropical rains, high altitude and untouched landscape create conditions that encourages unique species to thrive. Thymann used a route that had lain unused for decades, after Congolese insurgents closed the park; through this route he discovered glaciers that were thought disappeared.

Australasia

No glacier exists in Australia. By contrast, there are as many as 3,000 glaciers in New Zealand. Many of them are located in the Southern Alps on the South Island and classified as mid-latitude mountain glaciers. They have been retreating since 1890.

When the glaciers retreat, some form proglacial lakes such the one shown in front of Donne Glacier, Mount Tutoko, New Zealand. Satellite imagery has revealed that many proglacial lakes in New Zealand are expanding in size due to glacier retreat.

 

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Donne Glacier, New Zealand – Klaus Thymann (2013)

Top view of Donne Glacier, which descends down on the east face of Mount Tutoka, southwest New Zealand. This glacier has been undergoing rapid retreat for decades and in 2000 a new unnamed alpine lake was formed.

Antarctica

 

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Pine Island Glacier and Antarctic Peninsula, western Antarctica – Satellite Image (2016)

This image shows the Antarctic Peninsula in western Antarctica, with the Pine Island Glacier in the lower left.

The Pine Island Glacier, one the largest glaciers in western Antarctica, is the fastest thinning glacier in Antarctica, responsible for some 25% of Antarctica’s ice loss. It loses an extraordinary 45 billion tonnes of ice to the ocean each year — equivalent to 1 millimetre of global sea level rise every eight years. The ice loss rate is alarmingly accelerating. The single glacier contains about 52 centimetres of potential global sea level rise and is thought to be in the process of unstable retreat.

 

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Larsen C, western Antarctica – Satellite Image (2013)

In July 2017, a giant iceberg, known as A68 and measuring 5,800 square kilometres in size, broke free from Larsen C ice field in western Antarctica. (For comparison, Hong Kong Island is 80.5 square kilometres in size) It is one of the largest icebergs ever recorded. This image is a retrospect of how Larsen C looked like in 2013 — a large rift had already been developed (centre of image).

 

博物館大使計劃2024/25 (下學期)

「博物館大使計劃」由中大賽馬會氣候變化博物館主辦,招募有志在校園內外推廣可持續發展教育與氣候行動的中大同學,並為其在實習期間提供資助。博物館大使會接受有關氣候變化、可持續發展及博物館營運的培訓。

完成培訓後,博物館大使須在博物館實習,並在指導下參與博物館營運和外展活動。每位完成大使計劃的學生將獲發證書。表現優異的大使可延長任期至下一學年。

 Ambassadorship Flyer 2024 v2

申請資格

計劃開放予所有中大本科生及研究生申請。

甄選準則

  • 對氣候行動的熱誠
  • 學習態度
  • 溝通與社交能力
  • 語文能力(導賞團及活動語言多以廣東話為主,輔以普通話及英語進行)

申請詳情

有興趣的中大同學請於2025年1月17日(星期五)晚上11時59分前填妥網上申請表格

入選的申請者將獲邀於2025年1月21日(星期二)至24日(星期五)期間參加遴選面試。

重要日子

截止申請日期
2025年1月17日(星期五)晚上11時59分

遴選面試
2025年1月21日(星期二)至24日(星期五)

全日培訓
2025年2月1日及8日(星期六)

評核
模擬及實習導賞團(各2小時)
2月下旬(確實日子待定)

每月例會
每月第一個星期五下午(如遇上假期或惡劣天氣,將順延至下一個星期五)


查詢

電話:3943 0817(鄧小姐)
電郵:andreatang@cuhk.edu.hk

地址
新界沙田香港中文大學康本國際學術園八樓
電話
3943 9632
電郵地址
mocc@cuhk.edu.hk
開放時間:
星期一、二、四至六:上午9時30分至下午5時
星期三、星期日,公眾假期及大學假期(12月24及31日,及農曆除夕):休館