News

Source To Sea short film published online – telling the story of Finnish freshwater researchers

Source To Sea is a film made by scientists to scientists about Finnish freshwater research. The story begins with snow, and the researchers trying to find out with isotopes where the snow comes from and where does it go: Into the rivers. We follow the scientists working on the hydrology and geomorphology of rivers all the way to the coast of Baltic Sea, where the geologists are studying the sediments carried into the sea by the rivers of Finland. On the focus is the climate change, and how will it change the water cycle in Finland, if the rivers and the sea will not freeze in the future, and if the snow will turn to water.

Link to the film at Digital Waters Flagship YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/-UgvBDKZLKY?si=kZMKDZ-qAP4TYoVD

The film contains field research imagery and scientist interviews, filmed during three research projects, Digital Waters Flagship (Funded by Research Council of Finland), Green-Digi-Basin and HYDRO-RI Platform (Funded by European Union – NextGenerationEU), between 2022-2024, aiming to make a digital twin of the Finnish river basins, while also educating the next generation of water scientists specialized in boreal and sub-arctic water resources.

Scientists interviewed the film come from several Finnish universities and research institutes working together on freshwater matters, for example from University of Turku, Aalto University, University of Oulu, Finnish Geospatial Research Institute and Finnish Environment Institute.

The film was made by Research Coordinator Annukka Pekkarinen from University of Turku and University Research Fellow, Dr Ville Kankare, University of Turku. It has been presented at APECS Polar Film Festival in March 2025 and at EGU25 Geocinema in May 2025.

More Information:

Research Coordinator Annukka Pekkarinen

University Research Fellow, Dr Ville Kankare

Annukka Pekkarinen

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Doctoral researcher Simo Ylönen

Chaos management for hydrological datasets

Simo Ylönen, University of Oulu, simo.ylonen@oulu.fi Collecting hydrological data is hard – Trusting it is even harder. We, researchers, spend a great deal of time collecting, analyzing, and modelling our datasets. Equally, much thought goes into planning the measurements themselves: is this gauging point the right place to represent a

Group photo from Biannual meeting in Oulu

Water experts from Digital Waters Flagship and Doctoral Education Pilot gathered to Oulu to plan their future research initiatives and meet up with local businesses

DIWA Doctoral Education Pilot started in the beginning of January and last week was the first time when all the doctoral researchers were gathered together to meet at the University of Oulu, meet each other across the participating organizations, to hear about the goals of the Digital Waters Flagship. The