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  • FieldSound in the Field: AGU24 in Washington, D.C. with Sarah Doherty
    2025/01/18

    The UW College of the Environment connected with the global Earth and space science community and showcased the incredible work of our researchers, students and staff at the American Geophysical Union’s Annual Meeting 2024 (AGU24) in Washington, D.C., December 9-13, 2024. The annual gathering of more than 25,000 scientists from over 100 countries is the largest in the world, and gives researchers the opportunity to share their work and connect with friends and colleagues.

    Department of Earth and Space Sciences PhD Candidate Haskelle White-Gianella also hosted interviews for FieldSound, our official podcast. Check out Haskelle's interview with Sarah Doherty, Senior Research Scientist at UW's Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, and Ecosystem Studies.

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    4 分
  • FieldSound in the Field: AGU24 in Washington, D.C. with Robert Wood
    2025/01/17

    The UW College of the Environment connected with the global Earth and space science community and showcased the incredible work of our researchers, students and staff at the American Geophysical Union’s Annual Meeting 2024 (AGU24) in Washington, D.C., December 9-13, 2024. The annual gathering of more than 25,000 scientists from over 100 countries is the largest in the world, and gives researchers the opportunity to share their work and connect with friends and colleagues.

    Senior Marketing Communications Director John Meyer also hosted interviews for FieldSound, our official podcast. Check out John's interview with UW Department of Atmospheric Science and Climate's Professor Robert Wood.

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    6 分
  • S3 Special Episode: FieldSound in the Field at AGU24 in Washington, D.C. with Corey Garza
    2025/01/16

    The UW College of the Environment connected with the global Earth and space science community and showcased the incredible work of our researchers, students and staff at the American Geophysical Union’s Annual Meeting 2024 (AGU24) in Washington, D.C., December 9-13, 2024. The annual gathering of more than 25,000 scientists from over 100 countries is the largest in the world, and gives researchers the opportunity to share their work and connect with friends and colleagues.

    Senior Marketing Communications Director John Meyer also hosted interviews for FieldSound, our official podcast. Check out John's interview with Corey Garza, Assistant Dean for Inclusive Excellence at the University of Washington College of the Environment.

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    5 分
  • Special Episode: FieldSound in the Field at AGU24 in Washington, D.C. with Lisa Graumlich
    2025/01/15

    The UW College of the Environment connected with the global Earth and space science community and showcased the incredible work of our researchers, students and staff at the American Geophysical Union’s Annual Meeting 2024 (AGU24) in Washington, D.C., December 9-13, 2024. The annual gathering of more than 25,000 scientists from over 100 countries is the largest in the world, and gives researchers the opportunity to share their work and connect with friends and colleagues.

    Senior Marketing Communications Director John Meyer also hosted interviews for FieldSound, the official podcast of the UW College of the Environment. Check out John's interview with outgoing AGU President, UW professor emeritus, and former dean of the College of the Environment, Lisa Graumlich!

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    14 分
  • S3 E5: Ocean Research with Aisha Rashid
    2024/10/29

    Aisha Rashid is a recent University of Washington graduate with dual degrees in marine biology and oceanography. During her time at UW, Rashid received a Husky 100 nod in 2024, served as captain of the equestrian team, and helped lead the College of the Environment’s student advisory council as co-chair.

    In this episode of FieldSound, Rashid shares audio from her experience aboard the research vessel Thomas G. Thompson as part of her senior thesis project in American Samoa, highlighting the transformative impact of hands-on research in marine geology and geophysics, particularly underwater volcanism. Rashid illustrates the powerful role of ocean technology in understanding our planet's most critical ecosystems.

    She also shares about her current work with Wild Orca, a research nonprofit under Dr. Deborah Giles, and contributes to crucial research on Southern Resident killer whales using a non-invasive research technique - a scent detection dog trained to sniff out killer whale feces. With a commitment to impactful climate solutions, she plans to pursue further studies after a gap year dedicated to research and community engagement.

    Rashid embodies the spirit of innovation and collaboration, ready to tackle the challenges of climate change and research ocean solutions. Join us as we dive into her inspiring journey!

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    14 分
  • S3 E4: From Undergrad to Grad Student with Samatha-Lynn Martinez and Trent Vonich
    2024/10/23

    In this episode of FieldSound, we meet two students who found their own paths at the University of Washington, blending their interests in science communication and public safety with research, classes and discovery — all the while laying the groundwork for their future careers.

    From an early age, Samantha Lynn-Martinez, a recent graduate of the UW with a dual degree in biology and marine biology, was drawn to the natural environment and wanted to get involved but didn’t know where to start. Then she heard about high school volunteer programs at local organizations, including Seattle Aquarium.

    Martinez enjoyed working with Seattle Aquarium visitors — showing them how to touch a sea urchin or how to be a good steward of nature — and she began doing social media engagement for the aquarium. That work introduced her to video-making.

    By combining that curiosity for the natural world with her passion for storytelling, Martinez now uses filmmaking and photography as powerful tools for science communication. Through the lens of a camera, she aims to make complex scientific ideas accessible and engaging. And she’s inspiring others to see the world through a new lens.

    “If I can introduce people to a topic they’ve never considered before on my Instagram, and then they do their own Google deep dive after, I think that’s a job well done,” Martinez said.

    All of the research she’s done has integrated some form of science communication. Martinez sees the value of this work and advocates for it with her supervisors and PIs.

    Recently, Martinez worked with NOAA in the Aleutian Islands studying steller sea lion ecology. She gained valuable field experiences working with sea lions, doing drone and photography surveys, photo identification and more.

    What began as an interest in marine life as a high school volunteer at the Seattle Aquarium has evolved into a remarkable journey for Martinez, who was named a Husky 100 in 2024. And she’s just getting started.

    “I just want to capture that curiosity. Curiosity is really what drives everything I do,” Martinez said. “Stuff that I’m currently doing with my own projects and through the UW have been really helpful in terms of building that portfolio, building those skills.”

    Trent Vonich is a Ph.D. student in atmospheric and climate science who studies the predictability of extreme weather. He’s passionate about unlocking the secrets of the world’s most powerful storms by exploring the potential of machine learning to transform meteorological forecasting.

    Vonich is not only a full-time student, he’s also an active-duty officer in the United States Air Force. He balances an exhilarating, fast-paced military career as a pararescueman with his studies and scientific research, all while looking ahead toward his future ambitions — NASA’s astronaut program.

    Vonich has always been interested in severe weather, but decided to focus on hurricanes after seeing a number of U.S. Navy and Air Force bases sustain damage by severe storms.

    When a weather forecast is wrong, that’s when Vonich steps in. His research examines why weather forecasts sometimes fail. Historically, scientists have looked at physics-based weather models to find answers, but machine learning may offer a much simpler way.

    “I think the most compelling part of machine learning impacting weather modeling is the speed at which you can now do forecasts. It’s a totally different approach,” he said. It takes a long time to build machine learning models and train them, but once trained, they work quickly.

    Now, tech companies have entered the field of weather modeling. For example,

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    14 分
  • S3 E3: Earth Science, Oceanography and Astrobiology with Jodi Young and Fabian Klenner
    2024/10/15

    In this episode of FieldSound, we meet two researchers who work in vastly different systems, but whose paths cross in the interdisciplinary field of astrobiology.

    Jodi Young is an assistant professor and biological oceanographer at the University of Washington who studies tiny, yet mighty, marine microalgae that play a crucial role in our planet's ecosystems. She’s fascinated by how these algae manage to survive and even flourish in the harsh, icy and briny waters of the polar regions — still somewhat of a mystery.

    As a member of the UW Future of Ice Initiative and Associate Director of the UW Astrobiology Program, Jodi Young’s research bridges the gap between Earth’s most remote locations and the potential for life in other worlds. Scientists like Young studying the extreme environments here on Earth can help the groundwork for understanding distant moons and exoplanets, like Ganymede, Mars and Enceladus.

    Fabian Klenner is a postdoctoral researcher at UW who focuses on geochemistry, planetary and space sciences and astrobiology. Klenner's work is part of NASA’s Europa Clipper mission, launched on October 14, 2024, with potential discoveries that could change our understanding of life in the universe, and the future of science.

    Klenner’s path led him from the quiet countryside to the cutting edge of planetary science, astrobiology and the search for life beyond Earth. Klenner combines laboratory experiments with advanced modeling to understand the chemical and physical processes happening in the oceans of icy moons like Enceladus and Europa, as well as groundbreaking experiments to detect potential biosignatures — clues that life might exist — on distant moons.

    Astrobiology is the multidisciplinary science of exploring life beyond our planet — a field that bridges biology, chemistry, astronomy, geology and more to understand the potential that exists in our universe.

    Related links:

    https://www.washington.edu/news/2024/03/22/signs-of-life-detectable-in-single-ice-grain-emitted-from-extraterrestrial-moons/

    https://www.washington.edu/news/2023/06/14/phosphate-a-key-building-block-of-life-found-on-saturns-moon-enceladus/

    https://www.washington.edu/news/2023/09/15/polar-experiments-reveal-seasonal-cycle-in-antarctic-sea-ice-algae/

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    22 分
  • S3 E2: The UW Farm with Eli Wheat
    2024/10/08

    In this episode of FieldSound, we meet Eli Wheat, an assistant teaching professor in the University of Washington’s Program on the Environment, an environmental studies program housed within the College of the Environment. Wheat is passionate about sustainable farming, and our relationship as humans with the land and food we consume.

    Wheat, who is also a core faculty member in the UW School of Public Health’s Food Systems, Nutrition, and Health program, brings a unique perspective as both a farmer and a scholar. He is helping to bridge the gap between academia and agriculture, inspiring the next generation to care for our planet.

    Wheat’s teaching laboratory is UW Farm, which began as a student organization in the early 2000s and has grown to encompass three locations across the Seattle campus. Students from many UW departments and majors are able to get out and experience food production in an urban setting.

    Beyond the campus, Wheat owns and operates SkyRoot Farm, a 20-acre certified organic animal and vegetable farm on Whidbey Island. SkyRoot’s farming practices are based on an ecosystem approach to land management in agriculture, and they grow mostly vegetables — plus keep a small herd of goats.

    https://environment.uw.edu/podcast

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    16 分