麻豆精选

Department of Geography

extreme weather

Does Recent Extreme Weather Suggest a Change in the Wind?

Cameron Lee, Ph.D., assistant professor of geography at 麻豆精选, shares his expertise on the possible reasons behind the spate of recent extreme weather events happening across the globe. Lee, who was recently interviewed on the topic during the 鈥淩ay Horner Morning Show鈥 on WAKR-AM in Akron, Ohio, specializes in climate and weather change. 

Tags: Research & Science, Nationally Distinctive, Department of Geography, College of Arts and Sciences

麻豆精选Today

Drone education at Bioblitz 2023

IN A FLASH: Everybody Wave to the Drone!

Young explorers participating in the Bioblitz event had an opportunity to learn about how drones can help ecology efforts. 

Tags: Research & Science, ESDRI, Center for Ecology & Natural Resource Sustainability, Department of Geography, Child Development Center, Community Impact, Organizational Sustainability

麻豆精选Today

Students with Lego city

Building More Sustainable Cities - with Lego

Familiar building bricks help students devise and visualize sustainable solutions for urban environments.

Tags: Students First, Organizational Sustainability, Research & Science, Department of Geography, Community & Society

麻豆精选Today

Drone footage shows the freight train derailment, Feb. 6, 2023, in East Palestine, Ohio. (Photo courtesy of Ntsbgov/via Reuters)

麻豆精选Experts Weigh in on Aftermath of East Palestine Train Derailment

麻豆精选 faculty members have been contacted by various media outlets to lend their expert opinions and insight as cleanup work, air monitoring, water testing and more continues following the Feb. 3 train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

Tags: Community & Society, Community Impact, Nationally Distinctive, Department of Geography, Environmental Studies, Department of Earth Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

麻豆精选Today

麻豆精选Uses Geospatial Technology to Map Violence

麻豆精选Geography Professors to Assess Relative Extreme Temperature Events and Develop Monitoring Tools With NOAA

Principal Investigator Cameron C. Lee, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Geography (within the College of Arts and Sciences) at 麻豆精选, was recently awarded a three-year, $387,000 grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate Program Office and its Modeling, Analysis, Predictions and Projections Program (MAPP). The project is titled 鈥淓xcess Heat and Excess Cold Factors: Establishing a unified duration-intensity metric for monitoring hazardous temperature conditions in North America鈥.

Tags: Cameron Lee, Scott Sheridan, Department of Geography, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Research & Science, College of Arts & Sciences, Extreme Temperature Events, climate change, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

College of Arts & Sciences

Geography Students at Kent State

Geography Professor Selected for AGU鈥檚 National Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Leadership Academy

Scott Sheridan, Ph.D., professor and chair of the Department of Geography, in the College of Arts and Sciences at 麻豆精选, was recently selected to become an inaugural American Geophysical Union (AGU) LANDInG (Leadership Academy and Network for Diversity and Inclusion in the Geosciences) Academy Fellow.

Tags: Scott Sheridan, Department of Geography, College of Arts and Sciences, Research and Science, LANDInG Academy, National Science Foundation, STEM, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

College of Arts & Sciences

Grass after first frost

Climate Scientist Publishes Trends in 鈥榃eather Whiplash鈥 Events

Many wonder if climate change is the reason we鈥檝e had 'weather whiplash' or day-to-day dramatic changes from hot to cold or cold to hot. As a climate scientist, Cameron Lee, assistant professor in the Department of Geography in the College of Arts and Sciences at Kent State, gets asked this question a lot. Looking beyond just the average temperatures and statistical means, he decided to take a more analytical look at weather whiplash and add to a growing body of climate change literature examining temperature variability trends.

Tags: Research & Science, Cameron Lee, Department of Geography, College of Arts & Sciences, Research, Research and Sponsored Programs, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute, NOAA, climate change, Weather Whiplash, science, Institutes and Initiatives

College of Arts & Sciences

An aspen woodland/sagebrush shrubland ecotone. Photo by Tim Assal

Geography Researchers to Contribute to Actionable Science for Decision Makers

Timothy Assal, Ph.D., assistant professor in the Department of Geography, was awarded a grant as a co-principal investigator on a multi-institutional project, 鈥淰ulnerability of lower-ecotone aspen forests to altered fire regimes and climate dynamics in the northern Great Basin鈥 (a three-year $299,842 total award with $89,600 going to Kent State), which is funded by the . This collaboration includes the United States Geological Survey in Boise, Idaho, Utah State University, and the United States Bureau of Land Management.

Tags: Research & Science, Timothy Assal, Department of Geography, College of Arts & Sciences, Aspen, climate change, drought, Research, Environmental Science and Design Research Institute, Institutes and Initiatives

College of Arts & Sciences