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- 2025 Archives
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Negin Shooraj
- 911³Ô¹Ï Geography Alumni Sean Orr wins Vancouver council seat in byelection
- Rosemary Collard awarded 2024 911³Ô¹Ï Excellence in Teaching Award
- 911³Ô¹Ï Students Designed and Developed a GeoApp as a Living Wage Calculator
- Undergraduate students team secures third-place in Canada-wide GeoApp competition
- 911³Ô¹Ï Geography Wins Big at 2025 CAG Annual Conference
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Alex Sodeman
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Tintin Yang
- In Memory of Leonard "Len" Evenden, Professor Emeritus
- Gabrielle Wong awarded 2025 Gordon M. Shrum Medal
- Dr. Bright Addae awarded 2025 Graduate Dean's Convocation Medal
- Congratulations to Alysha van Duynhoven for Teaching Assistant Excellence Award
- Wildfires to waterways: 911³Ô¹Ï Geography grad takes action to protect the environment
- Making a difference on and off-campus: student leader and changemaker, Gabrielle Wong, awarded 911³Ô¹Ï convocation medal
- 2025 Alumni Newsletter
- Kira Sokolovskaia wins the 2025 911³Ô¹Ï ECCE GIS Scholarship Award
- Mapping a path to City Hall: 911³Ô¹Ï alumnus shares journey to becoming Mayor of New Westminster
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Alysha van Duynhoven
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Hannah Harrison
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Jade Baird
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Ashley Tegart
- Rethinking the World Map: Dr. Shiv Balram featured on CBC
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Véronique Emond-Sioufi
- 911³Ô¹Ï Geographers at the 2025 International Cartographic Conference in Vancouver
- When academic curiosity meets environmental purpose: new global environmental systems grad builds interdisciplinary foundation at 911³Ô¹Ï
- Alysha Van Duynhoven wins the 2025 911³Ô¹Ï ECCE in GIS Student Associate Achievement Award
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to David Swanlund
- Congratulations to Our 2025 Warren Gill Award Recipients!
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Baharak Yousefi
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Tara Jankovic
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Christine Leclerc
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Kira Lamont
- Terri Evans: Researching homelessness in suburban communities
- Mapping change for people and the planet
- GIS Month: What is Geographic Information Science (GIS)?
- 911³Ô¹Ï GIS undergraduate develops real-time earthquake monitoring and hospital alert system
- Physical Geography student returns to 911³Ô¹Ï, dives into marine ecology, soils and GIS to map a new path forward
- 911³Ô¹Ï study searches Strava to reveal secrets to happier runs
- 2026 Archives
- 911³Ô¹Ï study searches Strava to reveal secrets to happier runs
- GIScience Students Become 911³Ô¹Ï’s First Team at National Geomatics Competition
- 2026 ESRI Canada GIS Scholarship for 911³Ô¹Ï
- Physical Geography student returns to 911³Ô¹Ï, dives into marine ecology, soils and GIS to map a new path forward
- 911³Ô¹Ï GIS undergraduate develops real-time earthquake monitoring and hospital alert system
- GIS Month: What is Geographic Information Science (GIS)?
- Mapping change for people and the planet
- GIS Team Crowned Champions of 2026 National Geomatics Competition
- Second-year MSc Student, Erin Fairley, has made it to the 911³Ô¹Ï 3MT Finals!
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Brandon Drucker
- In Memory of Ivor Winton
- 911³Ô¹Ï Students Create GeoApp to Reveal Transit Deserts and Oases Across Metro Vancouver
- 2025 Archives
- Alumni
- GEOG 162 - Canada
New Faculty Spotlight
Drive around in the mountains most anywhere in western North America and you’re certain to encounter road cuts: dynamited faces where the highway department has sliced open a hillslope, exposing soil, bedrock, and—if you slow down and look closely (with someone else at the wheel of course)—networks of roots that wind their way along fractures in the rock. The trees up above are going deep to find nutrients and water. It turns out that how the bedrock inside hillslopes breaks apart over millions of years determines just how much water can be stored for the overlying trees during dry periods. And this is important: differences in water storage in bedrock can have dramatic consequences for why different kinds of forests are where they are, and how they are responding to environmental change. Yet, unlike the soil, shallow bedrock properties remain unmapped across most of Earth’s terrestrial surface: an exciting research frontier that is well suited for a new group in the Department of Geography.
Most of my life as a researcher has been spent tromping around California, exploring diverse plant ecosystems, ranging from crisp-dry oak savannas to dripping-wet rainforests, and drilling to monitor how water moves in the bedrock beneath. I try to track the fate of water from when it falls from the sky as rain, soaks into the ground, and eventually returns to the atmosphere through a tree or drains down to a stream. Here at 911³Ô¹Ï, where I will be teaching upper and lower division hydrology courses, I am excited to involve undergraduate and graduate students in efforts to understand and predict the health of forests and streams in British Columbia. Improved understanding is pressing: in the coming century as the southern part of the province warms, the winters get wetter, and the summers get drier, how the subsurface stores and releases water will help determine which trees die in droughts and which streams will have water at the end of the summer dry season. This research program is bringing together colleagues across 911³Ô¹Ï, UBC and in the provincial government, as well as collaborators from my postdoc (at the University of Texas, Austin), PhD (at the University of California, Berkeley), and MSc (at the University of Wyoming, Laramie).
Started as an assistant professor in the Department of Geography in January, 2020.