Martin Goldhaber Senior Scientist, Powell Center Director U.S. Geological Survey |
Marty Goldhaber received his BS in Chemistry
(1968) and PhD in Geochemistry (1973) both from UCLA. After
spending a year as a Post Doc at Yale, he joined the USGS in
1975. He is currently a Senior Scientist at the USGS where he
received the Department of the Interior Meritorious Service
and Presidential Rank Awards. He has served a rotation as the
Chief Scientist for Geology and has also served as co-chair of
the USGS Science Strategy Team which was charged with defining
key strategic directions for the USGS. He has been a member
of the Geochemical Society since 1972 and has been involved in
the Society in a number of roles, currently Past President.
His association with the Colorado School of Mines and
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as adjunct
professor resulted in the mentoring of thirteen masters and
doctoral students. His early research was on the
biogeochemistry of sulfur in modern marine sediments. After
joining the USGS, he applied these perspectives on sulfur
geochemistry towards understanding the origin of
sediment-hosted ore deposits, which then evolved into a focus
on the environmental impacts of these ores. His current
research is on the evolution of the broad ‘geochemical
landscapes’ resulting from the interplay of geologic,
geomorphologic, hydrologic, and biologic processes.
Geochemical landscape studies are underway in the Sacramento
Valley of California, and the Prairie Pothole region of the
north central U.S. and southern Canada. |
|
Jill Baron Ecosystem Ecologist, Powell Center Director U.S. Geological Survey |
Jill Baron is an ecosystem ecologist with the
U.S. Geological Survey, and a Senior Research Ecologist with
the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory at Colorado State
University. Her interests include applying ecosystem concepts
to management of human-dominated regions, and understanding
the biogeochemical and ecological effects of climate change
and atmospheric nitrogen deposition to mountain ecosystems.
She is co-director of the John Wesley Powell Center for Earth
System Science Analysis and Synthesis. |
|
Barbara Bekins Research Hydrologist U.S. Geological Survey |
Barbara Bekins investigates the natural
attenuation of contaminants in groundwater. Her work
has focused on biodegradation of petroleum
contaminants and nitrate. Techniques include
laboratory experiments, field investigations, and
computer modeling of reactions, groundwater flow, and
transport. |
|
Nina Burkardt Research Social Scientist U.S. Geological Survey |
Nina Burkardt is a Research Social Scientist
at the USGS Fort Collins Science Center. Her research focuses
on negotiation and conflict resolution in natural resource
decision making, institutional analysis of natural resource
management processes and policies, and the use of science in
decision making. |
|
Daren Carlisle Ecological Studies Chief U.S. Geological Survey |
Daren Carlisle is currently the Ecological
Studies Chief for the National Water-Quality Assessment
Program. In this capacity, he envisions, plans, and designs
studies that investigate the effects of land and water
management on stream health. Before joining the USGS in 2002,
he was a regional ecologist for the the National Park Service,
where he provided technical assistance to park units regarding
all aspects of aquatic ecology. Daren's educational training
focused on the effects of non-native fish on alpine lake
ecosystems (MS, Utah State) and the effects of metal
contamination on stream food webs (PhD, Colorado State). |
|
Chuck Estabrook Program Manager National Science Foundation |
Dr. Charles Estabrook is currently a program manager for EarthScope at the National Science Foundation. Dr. Estabrook received his PhD in Seismology/Geophysics from Columbia University. He has carried out research on earth structure, seismic sources, and has built seismic stations for the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty Organization. |
|
Jeanne Hardebeck Research Geophysicist U.S. Geological Survey |
Jeanne Hardebeck is a Research Geophysicist with the Earthquake Science Center in Menlo Park, California. Her research interests include: the strength of faults, earthquake stress triggering, statistical testing of earthquake forecasting methods, and imaging fault structures using microseismicity. She is currently focused on the earthquake hazards of the California central coast, the site of the destructive San Simeon earthquake in December 2003. |
|
Gregory McCabe Research Scientist U.S. Geological Survey |
Greg McCabe is a research scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey and is an adjunct professor at the University of Denver and the Metropolitan State College of Denver. He also is a research affiliate with the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado. He received bachelor and masters degrees from the University of Delaware and a Ph.D. from Louisiana State University. He is Chief of the Hydroclimatic Processes and Hazards project within the National Research Program. His research interests include hydroclimatology, climate variability and change, synoptic climatology, climate teleconnections, and hydrologic modeling. |
|
Rich Pouyat Research Ecologist USDA Forest Service; Adjunct Assistant Professor, University of Maryland |
Rich has researched urban woodland ecology and restoration; urban biogeochemistry; classification, mapping, and interpretation of anthropogenic soils; integration of ecological, soil, and social sciences; and integration of science and public policy. |
|
Carl Shapiro Senior Economist U.S. Geological Survey Energy and Minerals, and Environmental Health; Co-Director, USGS Science and Decisions Center |
Carl Shapiro is Senior Economist, Energy and Minerals, and Environmental Health and is Co-Director of the USGS Science and Decisions Center, a multidisciplinary center that advances the use of science in resource management decision making. Previously, he spent about 15 years as the principal economist in the USGS Director’s Office, where he led and participated in analytical studies on topics ranging from interagency wetland data consistency to institutional issues associated with map revision and pricing. He is an adjunct associate professor of economics in the School of Public Affairs at American University in Washington, DC, where he has taught graduate courses in economics and public management for over 15 years. |
|
Tom Torgersen Program Officer National Science Foundation |
Tom Torgersen is a Program Officer at the National Science Foundation with responsibilities for Hydrologic Sciences and "Water Sustainability and Climate". His research expertise includes isotopic tracers and dating of groundwater, hydrogeology, coastal ocean processes, limnology, and paleoclimate. |
|
Nathan Wood Research Geographer U.S. Geological Survey |
Nathan Wood is a research geographer at the USGS Western Geographic Science Center and is co-located at the USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Washington. His research focuses on societal vulnerability to natural hazards and he is currenty focusing on community vulnerability to tsunamis, volcanoes, and climate-change-enhanced coastal hazards in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. |
Download Adobe Reader to view PDF files.