Department News
Babs Buttenfield AwardedDistinguished Teaching Honors
Congratulations to Babs Buttenfieldon receiving the for her career-long devotion to GIScience education. It is a well-deserved honor and a fitting conclusion to her teaching career. She is retiring at the end of December 2020.Buttenfield, who established one of the first campus curricula in GIScience, is renowned for her engaging teaching style, remarkable ability to explain complex concepts through example and metaphor, and skill at blending theory with technical skills. In a rapidly evolving field, she delivers courses that are at the cutting edge of GIScience.
Since 1951,have been offered annually to recognize outstanding accomplishments by members in research and scholarship, teaching, education, service to the discipline, public service outside academe, and for lifetime achievement.TheAAG Honors Committee is elected by the AAG membership and charged with making award recommendations for each category, with no more than two awards given in any one category. For more than 100 years, The American Association of Geographers (AAG) has contributed to the advancement of geography. Our members from nearly 100 countries share interests in the theory, methods, and practice of geography, which they cultivate through the AAG's Annual Meeting, scholarly journals (,ٳand), and the online. The AAG is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization founded in 1904.
Economic Aftermath of the Virus in Colorado
The (BAHRA) co-directed by Jennifer Fluri, Abby Hickcox (PhD in Geography from CU 鶹ӰԺ and currently Associate Director of the Honor Program), and Sabrina Sideris (Program Director of INVST Community Studies Program at CU 鶹ӰԺ), will focus their ongoing research efforts on the impacts of COVID-19 on housing affordability and housing insecurity in 鶹ӰԺ County and the Denver Metro area.
Emily Yeh Elected Vice President of AAG
Emily Yeh, Geography Department Chair, was elected Vice President ofthe American Association of Geographers (AAG) earlier this year. Her term started July 1, 2020 and will be followed by a year as president of the association and a year as immediate past-president.
Holly Barnard, Katherine Lininger NSF Grant
Geography professorHolly Barnardis the Principal Investigatorand Geography ProfessorKatherine Lininger, with Eve-Lyn Hinckley, are the Co-Principle Investigators on a new 5-year $6.9M NSF grant to study the Critical Zone in the American West. Critical Zone Observatories have done a lot of work discovering and quantifying fundamental critical zone processes. But how do those processes integrate and affect each other? That’s the next frontier for critical zone research, and this project jumps right in. The researchers will look at how water, trees, soils, and rocks interact and change each other in the fire- and drought-prone landscapes of the American West. Their discoveries will uncover links between how water is stored in the landscape and how that affects key processes in forest ecology, rock chemistry, and soil chemistry. Further, they will help predict how climate change will modify these interactions and change water and therefore life in the West.
Colleen ReidEmerging Scholar Award
ProfessorColleen Reidwas awarded the Emerging Scholar Award from the Health and Medical Geography Section of the American Association of Geographers.
Yaffa TrueloveCU Research and Innovation Seed Grant
ProfessorYaffa Truelovereceived aCU Research and Innovation Seed Grant, together with co-PIs Geography ProfessorsKatherine LiningerandAzita Ranjbar, “Adapting to the ‘Waterless’ City: The Production of Extreme Water Scarcity in Shimla, India.” The project will be a comparative study of waterless cities across South Asia, including Chennai, Latur, and Bangalore. It will assess feedback loops between socio-political and biophysical mechanisms that produce extreme forms of urban water scarcity and insecurity.
Deep Learning in Geospatial Uncertainty Modeling
Dr.Guofeng Caoreceived $265,058 in fundingfrom National Science Foundation for the project "'.With this support, Guofeng will develop a new deep learning-based spatial statistical framework to address long-standing problems in geospatial analysis, including complex geospatial patterns, geospatial heterogeneity and geospatial uncertainty. This project will offer novel solutions to fundamental analysis, modeling, and integration problems involving geospatial data, and advance the understanding of the nature of geospatial uncertainty. This project will enhance the proper and cost-effective utilization of geospatial data, and will have broader impacts on disciplines in whichgeospatial data are involved. Furthermore, with a public outreach component on uncertainty-aware spatial thinking, this project will advance the public good by increasing the public awareness ofgeospatial uncertainty and critical map reading and usage. The performanceof the developed methods will be evaluated in two domain applications: spatiotemporal disease mapping in public health and modeling uncertainty of land cover changes and the impact on atmospheric models.
Seth Spielman
Seth Spielman served on the National Academy of Science's Committee on National Statistics working group on privacy and the US Census.
Dr. Spielman also joined the Scientific Advisory Committee for Oak Ridge National Labs Geospatial Science and Human Security Division; Georgia Tech's External Data Advisory Committee; and was appointed to CU 鶹ӰԺ's Idea Council which is charged with implementing strategies to transform the CU 鶹ӰԺ community to make it more equitable, diverse, and inclusive.
Former CU Geography Professor Konrad Steffen Passed Away in Greenland
Konrad Steffen, former CU Geography Professor and Director of the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL), died following an accident on theGreenland ice sheet this past August (August 8 2020). Konrad ("Koni") Steffen was a professor in the CU Geography department from 1990-2012, as well as Director of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) from 2005-2012. He had been conducting reserach into climate change - notably in the Arctic and Antarctic - for over 40 years and was regarded as one of the world's leading authoirities in the field. At the time of the accident he was at research station called "Swiss Camp" that he had founded thirty years ago.
With Koni Steffen's death, the world's climate research communitylost an extremely prominent researcher who was also a uniquely kind and committed man. Geography Professor and CIRES Director Waleed Abdalati, who earned his PhD under Steffen, noted, "For those who knew Koni, you will appreciate that he was in a place he loved, doing exactly what he loved. The first time I went to Greenland with him as a graduate student, I remember when the helicopter landed and he got out. He leaned back with arms outstretched, smiling up at the sky, as if he was just drinking and savoring the cold Greenland air. He will be missed."
Born in 1952, Konrad Steffen was a dual Swiss and American citizen.Having studied natural sciences, he gained a doctorate from ETH Zurich in 1984. After serving as a professor in the Department of Geography from 1990-2012, he returned to Switzerland, where he was Director of WSL as well asProfessor for Climate and Cryosphere at ETH Zurich and at EPFL in Lausanne. The Geography department expresses our heartfelt condolences to his family and friends.
Also see:
(Original article)
(CIRES tribute)
Waleed AbdalatiElected American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Fellow
At the end of last year,Professor Waleed Abdalatiwas elected as an American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Fellow, a lifetime distinction honoring invaluable contributions to science and technology.
Jennifer Balch NSF CAREER Award
Also in 2019,Professor Jennifer Balchreceived a prestigious, five-year National Science Foundation CAREER award, “Fire impacts on forest carbon recovery in a warming world: Training the next generation of Earth analysts by exploring a missing scale of observations.”The project addresses the fact that forests in the western U.S., which are important in regulating the amount of carbon in the atmosphere, are burning more rapidly with the increased extent and number of wildfires. As a result, the amount of carbon stored in these forests has decreased significantly.The project uses innovative remote sensing and ecosystem carbon measuring techniques to advance understanding of when forests shift from carbon sinks to carbon sources under changing fire regimes.
Alumni Updates
Update from Steven Drake, BA 2010
I am living in Kentucky, and working for the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet.I am currently the Lead Cartographer for the Official Highway Map of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. I took this position in early 2019 and finished the .
An elective class in Geography opened my eyes and mind to how people relate to their surroundings, and the ways that can be visually represented. While my degree allowed me to begin a career progression that has taken me to where I am now, it was my education in Geography, and the passion shared with the people around me, that has truly impacted me.
Joe Tucillo, PhD 2020
Joe Tuccillo, who recently received his PhD from the department, has joined Oak Ridge National Lab as an R&D Associate Research Scientist in the Geospatial Science and Human Security Division.Joe completed a dissertation on generating high resolution synthetic populations for measuring hazard vulnerability, exposure, and response.
Sarah Tynen,PhD 2019
Sarah Tynencompleted over two years of fieldwork in Xinjiang, China.After working for over a year for CU 鶹ӰԺ's Graduate School and helping other graduate students in writing their dissertations and grant applications, shejoins the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague as a post-doc in the Oriental Institute's Chinese ethnic policy research group.Sarah is involved in advocating for an end toin China, where Uyghur Muslims--including cultural and intellectual leaders--are being detained in large numbers.Sarah's research, reported in the CU Arts and Sciences Magazineexplores how authoritarian actions can trickle down to shape peoples’ everyday lives, and how human beings push back in small but sometimes powerful ways.
Carol Harden, PhD 1983
Professor Emerita Carol Harden of the University of Tennessee, an alumnus of this department was recently awarded the for her career of research, teaching, and service to the discipline of Geography. She was also named an .
Michelle Olsgard Stewart, PhD 2014
Michelle Olsgard Stewart, recently became the Executive Director of the Yampa Valley Sustainability Council in Steamboat Springs, CO. In this position she will develop and lead climate action programs in the community.