People


Seth Arens, Western Water Assesment

Seth Arens

Seth Arens

Seth Arens, Utah Research Integration Specialist

Western Water Assesment

 

email | website

Matt Bekker, Brigham Young University

Matt Bekker

Matt Bekker

Matt Bekker, Associate Professor, Department of Geography Brigham Young University

My research includes applications of dendrochronology in hydroclimatology, geomorphic disturbances including earthquakes and avalanches, historical archaeology, and forest pattern-process interactions.  

email | website


Brendan Buckley, Columbia University

Brendan Buckley

Brendan Buckley

Brendan Buckley, Research Full Professor Lamont Doherty Earth Institute

Columbia University

email | website

Justin DeRose, Rocky Mountain Research Station

R. Justin DeRose, Research Ecologist

Rocky Mountain Research Station

As a scientist for the Forest Inventory and Analysis Program, Dr. DeRose researches tree-rings to answer questions related to forestry, ecology, dendroecology, and dendroclimatology. He specializes in non-conventional approaches to dendrochronology and focuses on applications to forest and water resource management.

email | website | video

Judson Finley, Utah State University

Judson Finley

Judson Finley

Judson Finley, Assistant Professor, Anthropology-Archeology

My current research uses dendrochronology to examine the adoption of maize horticulture at the northern margins of the Fremont archaeological culture area in northeastern Utah’s Uinta Basin from approximately AD 500-1500. Dendrochronology provides a multi-decadal climate reconstruction that allows us to consider the conditions under which native people began cultivating maize in marginal environmental conditions, ultimately allowing mobile foragers to settle into semi-permanent villages with more complex social organization. This coupled environmental-archaeological research provides insight into the shift from foraging to farming economies that is important in a global archaeological context.

email  |  website

Robert Gillies, Utah State University

Robert Gillies

Robert Gillies

Robert Gillies, Professor, Department of Plants, Soils and Climate Director, Utah Climate Center

Utah State University

 

email | website

Larry Hipps, Utah State University

Larry Hipps

Larry Hipps

Larry Hipps

Professor, Department of Plants, Soils and Climate

Utah State University

 

email | website


Roger Kjelgren, Utah State University

Roger Kjelgren

Roger Kjelgren

Roger Kjelgren, Professor, Department of Plants, Soils, Climate

Utah State University

 

email | website


Jim Long, Utah State University

Jim Long

Jim Long

Jim Long, Professor, Department of Wildland Resources

Utah State University

 

email | website

Joey Pettit, Utah State University

Joey Pettit

Joey Pettit

Joey Pettit,  Dendro Lab Supervisor

Utah State University

My research interests include using tree rings to describe ecological aspects of forest condition and dynamics. During my Ph.D. research, I used demographic information of forests and trees used by the federally endangered Indiana bat to describe a desired forest condition, conducive to hosting the endangered bat.

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Tammy Rittenour, Utah State University

Tammy Rittenour

Tammy Rittenour

Tammy Rittenour, Associate Professor, Department of Geology

Utah State University

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Steve Voelker, Utah State University

Steve Voelker

Steve Voelker

Steve Voelker, Assistant Professor of Dendroclimatology, Department of Plants, Soils and Climate

Utah State University

My research objectives are to increase our understanding of: 1) past climate variability and climate drivers, 2) changes in tree growth, allocation and other physiological responses to climate change, 3) vegetation responses to CO2fertilization, 4) climate change interactions with tree species competitive interactions, succession, disturbance, pests and pathogens. This research employs data collection in the field and laboratory as well as mechanistic and empirical modeling techniques applied to dendrochronology, ecophysiology and stable isotope ecology.

email | website

Simon Wang, Utah State University

Simon Wang

Simon Wang

Simon Wang, Associate Professor, Department of Plants, Soils and Climate

Utah State University

email | website