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Research in Geography and Planning

Researchers in Queen's Department of Geography and Planning have a long history of discovery and innovation that has shaped our knowledge of Earth’s places, societies, environments, and landscapes. We bridge the social sciences and humanities with the natural sciences to address some of our world's most complex problems, including issues related to social justice, climate change and planning for healthy communities.

Understanding hydrological and biogeochemical responses of Arctic watersheds to climate and environmental change

Arctic Watershed Biogeochemistry Lab

Research focus

The Arctic Watershed Biogeochemistry Lab, part of the Facility for Biogeochemical Research on Environmental Change and the Cryosphere (FaBRECC) examines the impact of climate change and anthropogenic activities on the hydrology, water quality, and biogeochemical processes of glacial and permafrost watersheds.

Background

Dr. Melissa Lafrenière was born and raised in Mattawa Ontario, situated in the Ottawa River Valley, on the traditional and unceded lands of her Algonquin ancestors. Her interest in hydrology and water quality issues sprung from growing up in an environment where much of her day to day activities and well-being was dependant on the flow and quality of the Mattawa River.

She obtained her undergraduate degree in Geography at the University of Western Ontario (B.Sc. Hon. 1996), and pursued her graduate studies in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Alberta (Ph.D. 2003).

Her thesis research investigated the hydrological and biogeochemical controls on the transport of organochlorine contaminants in glaciated alpine catchments as part of an interdisciplinary study at Bow Lake, in Banff National Park, Alberta.

 

She joined the Department of Geography at Queen's in July 2004. She is the co-director of the Cape Bounty Arctic Watershed Observatory (CBAWO), a long term integrated watershed research facility on Melville Island, NU.

Her research combines the use of field observations and experiments across a range of scales, with laboratory experiments and biogeochemical analyses to investigate the impacts of hydrological and permafrost changes on the mobilization and cycling of carbon, nitrogen and dissolved metals and ions in watersheds in the Canadian Arctic.

As a research team, Dr. Lafreniere's lab engages in partnerships and knowledge exchange with the local Inuit communities who are the most directly affected by climate change and strive to incorporate traditional knowledge to enhance the value, and the understanding, of collected data.

 

Dr. Melissa Lafrenière

Professor
Queen's Department of Geography and Planning

Email: melissa.lafreniere@queensu.ca

Learn more about Dr. Melissa Lafrenière

News and Research

Partners and Supporters

Some of the partners and supporters of Dr. Lafreniere's Arctic Watershed Biogeochemistry research program

  • Cape Bounty Arctic Watershed Observatory (CBAWO)
  • NSERC Discovery
  • ArcticNet
  • Polar Continental Shelf Programme
  • Polar Knowledge Canada
  • Environment and Climate Change Canada
  • Nunavut Research Institute
  • Permafrost Net
  • NWT Cumulative Impact Monitoring Program
  • Queen's Analytical Services Unit