Rosemary Sherriff published “Warming drives a front of white spruce recruitment near Western Treeline, Alaska.”

Rosemary Sherriff published “Warming drives a front of white spruce recruitment near western treeline, Alaska” with National Park Service collaborators in Global Change Biology. Warming has increased productivity near the boreal forest margin in Alaska. However, the effects on seedling recruitment has received little attention, in spite of forecasted forest expansion.

Drs. Chelsea Teale and Amy Rock facilitated lesson planning and school pairings for 50 students for Geography Awareness Week.

With the help of the Center for Community Based Learning, Drs. Chelsea Teale and Amy Rock of the Geography Department facilitated lesson planning and school pairings for 50 students as part of Geography Awareness Week (November 13-17). Groups of future educators enrolled in GEOG 470, Geography for Teachers, took giant floor maps into nine K-12 schools to conduct interactive lessons including a “tour” of indigenous lands in Humboldt County, California’s climate and weather, Coronado’s quest for gold in the Southwest, the American Revolution, and the European theater of World War II.

Monica Moreno-Espinoza and professor Stephen Cunha presented papers at the 79th meeting of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers.

Geography senior Monica Moreno-Espinoza and Professor Stephen Cunha presented papers at the 79th Meeting of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers (APCG) meeting at Portland State University. For Mediterranean Refugee Crisis: Italian Student Attitudes Towards Political Migrants, Moreno-Espinoza surveyed 844 students from eight universities across Italy.

Patrick Wood wins the NACIS student map competition.

Congratulations to Humboldt Geography major Patrick Wood, 2016 Winner of the North American Cartographic Information Society (NACIS) Student Map Competition! The competition included 19 entries (12 graduate students, 7 undergraduates), traveling from 9 university programs including the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Penn State University, University of Oregon, University College London, and the University of Toronto.

CGS conference awards, 2017.

After a long but fun road trip down to San Diego, Humboldt came home with several top awards from the 71st Annual California Geographical Society meeting in San Diego. The 16 current students, along with alumni, who attended represented Humboldt Geography with strong enthusiasm and professionalism.

Nathaniel Douglass wins NACIS map design award.

Nathaniel Alexander Douglass, a student in Humboldt Geography, won the Best Cartographic Design at the North American Cartographic Information Society’s 2017 Student Map and Poster Competition in Montreal, Canada. He received a $500 award and interest from organizations such as National Geographic, Esri Maps and Data, and several grad schools. He poured his heart and soul into the map he presented, depicting a snow-covered Sierra Nevada mountain range.

PermLink: http://now.humboldt.edu/achievements/10209/

Professor of Geography Matthew Derrick presented at South and Central Asia Fulbright conference.

Associate professor of Geography Matthew Derrick presented a paper titled “Mosques and Monumentality in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan” at the South and Central Asia Fulbright conference, held in New Delhi, India, February 26-28. Derrick is currently a Fulbright scholar based in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

PermLink: http://now.humboldt.edu/achievements/10367/

Geography professor Matthew Derrick delivered a conference paper presentation titled “Territorial Politics of Mosques in Post-Soviet Central Asia."

Geography professor Matthew Derrick delivered a conference paper presentation titled “Territorial Politics of Mosques in Post-Soviet Central Asia” at the Central Asia Fulbright Seminar for U.S. Scholars and Students, held April 9-12 in Almaty, Kazakhstan. Derrick is currently spending his sabbatical year as a Fulbright Scholar based in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

PermaLink: http://now.humboldt.edu/achievements/10427/