Showing posts with label forests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forests. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Sandra Brown, 1944-2017

source
Sandra Brown passed away two weeks ago and I wanted to register somewhere my great admiration for her and the influence she had on my own career. Sandra was a formidable scientist who dedicated her life to understanding carbon storage in tropical forests, forming the basis of methods we use today and programs to protect forest carbon such as REDD+. She was the external committee member for my dissertation at Clark University, and I can confirm (as others have noted) she never suffered fools (or foolishness) lightly. I remember Sandra being firm on the divide between policy and science, saying that the role of science was only to provide information for the policy, never to direct it. Policy, she emphasized, is best made by policy-makers, and it's not only the science that drives it.

Our paths crossed several more times after that, while I was teaching at Mount Holyoke College and again at Leicester, where she was an external examiner on a viva last year. We got together for dinner while she was here and we spent several hours chatting. We walked by the Attenborough Arboretum and she quizzed me on Sir David versus Sir Richard and which one was the actor and which one the naturalist. I passed her test and she locked arms with me as we walked around the streets near College Court where she was staying. She told me about her childhood growing up in London (not spending hours galavanting through the forest unattended, for what it's worth). Sandra was concerned about improving the capacity of those in developing countries to quantify and manage their own carbon resources, and emphasized the importance of PhD programs like ours in doing so. I admit I feel a bit cheated not to have had another chance to see her, but I know that she felt very lucky to have made it to 72, having experienced a serious illness as a young woman. I believe it was her gratitude for life that made her such a tireless promoter of science and a great proselytizer on the importance of tropical forests in the global carbon budget.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Monitoring Climate From Space MOOC


Here is quick heads up about a MOOC about Monitoring Climate From Space I participated in that was put together by the European Space Agency (ESA). There are some great presenters on the course, which lasts five weeks. They filmed my bit in Cambridge, where I got to meet them at the British Antarctic Survey, which was very cool. Then we went outside to film me talking about forests and carbon and remote sensing (oh my!). The course is geared towards policy-makers, so it's quite accessible, but it's also broad-ranging enough to likely be of interest to PhD students (or super-keen undergrads!). The next round of the course starts next Monday. If you take it, let me know what you think.