Curriculum Vitae

 

Gerard H. Roe

Associate Professor,

Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences,

University of Washington.

 

ADDRESS

 

2206 N41st St

Seattle, WA 98103

phone: (206) 697-3298

office: (206) 543–4980

e-mail: gerard@ess.washington.edu

 

EDUCATION

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology                                                     Cambridge, MA

Ph.D. in Atmospheric Science, June 1999. Dissertation under Prof. Richard

Lindzen: The mutual interaction between the great continental ice sheets and

atmospheric stationary waves.

 

Oriel College, University of Oxford                                                                Oxford, UK

Bachelor of Arts degree in Physics. First Class Honors, June 1992.

 

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

 

September 2007 to present: Associate Professor,                                                 Seattle, WA

January 2003 to 2007: Assistant Professor

University of Washington, Department of Earth and Space Sciences,

Adjunct Associate Professor, Dept. of Atmospheric Sciences

 

September 1999 to December, 2002: Postdoctoral Researcher,                            Seattle, WA

University of Washington, Quaternary Research Center/Joint Institute for

the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean.

 

September 1993 – March 1999: Graduate Research Assistant,                      Cambridge, MA

March 1999 – July 1999: Post-doctoral Associate,

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Atmospheres,

Oceans, and Climate


 

SERVICE, HONORS AND AWARDS

 

Associate Editor, Quaternary Research, Sept 2004 to present.

Distinguished Public Lecturer, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences. October 2008.

Flint Visiting Professor, Yale University, April to June, 2007

ESS teaching award, honorable mention, 2006, 2007.

UW distinguished mentor award, nomination 2009.

Session organizer, Rapid Climate Change, Leverhulme Symposium, Cambridge University, Royal Society, London, U.K, March, 2008.

Organizer NSF workshop: Climate over Landscapes, Sept 2007

Carl-Gustav Rossby Award for Most Outstanding Thesis submitted to the Program in Atmospheres, Oceans, and Climate, 1998-99.

Oxford University Exhibition, June 1990.

 

UW Service/Committees

 

ESS undergraduate advisor Jun 06 to present;

ESS computer committee (chair, 2007); ESS curriculum committee; ESS prelims exam committee Fall 04, 05, 06, 08; ESS graduate admissions Spr 05; ESS glaciology research faculty search committee, Fall 04; Seminar organizer (ESS, QRC, PCC).

UW Program on climate change: governing board Jan 03 to present; executive committee Jun 05 to present; director search committee, June 06; postdoc hiring committee, Sept 03; organizer summer retreat Sept 03.

UW Program on the Environment, member advisory board

UW College of the Environment, Institute committee

Math and Science Field Committee to the Provost's Advisory Council on Teacher Preparation

 

CLASSES TAUGHT

 

ESS 201: The Earth system and climate, Winter, 2009, 2010

ESS exploration seminar Denmark and Greenland, August, 2008

ESS 590: Landscapes and Climate, Spring 2009

ENVIR 511 512: Graduate certificate in environmental management, City of Bellevue action plan for community greenhouse gas reduction, Winter, Spring 09

ESS 314: Geophysics: expedition to planet Earth, Winter 2004, Fall, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009

PCC/ATM/OCN/ESS 587: Climate dynamics, Fall 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008

ESS 416/516: Geophysics: the atmosphere, Spring 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006.

ESS 590: Special topics in climate: Heinrich events (seminar). Fall 2003, Winter,

 Spring 2004. Centennial variability (seminar), Winter 2005; African aridity

 (seminar), Winter, 06; The Holocene Express, Winter 2007.

ESS/ATM 590: Knowability and no ability in climate and earth sciences (seminar), Spring 06, 08, 09

PCC 586: That sinking feeling: the thermohaline circulation (seminar). Spring, 2005.

ESS 534/ATM 514: Ice and climate modeling, Winter 2001.

ESS 431: Principles of glaciology (5 lecture model ice dynamics), Fall 2003.

 

 

 

GRADUATE ADVISEES

 

Alison Anders (ESS, PhD, 2005)=, Michael OÕNeal (ESS, PhD, 2005)=, Drew Stolar (ESS, PhD, 2006)=, Noah Finnegan (ESS, PhD, 2006)=, Summer Rupper (ESS, MSc, 2004; ESS, PhD, 2007)*, Camille Li (ATM, PhD, 2007)#, Kevin Rennert (ATM PhD 2007)=, Kat Huybers (ESS, MSc 2007)*, Jane Locke (ESS PhD 2008)#, Jim Lutz (CFR PhD 2008)#, Robert Sheerer (ESS, MSc 2008)#, Eric Buer (ESS, MSc 2008)#, Jennifer Adams (CivE PhD 2007)#, Justin Minder (ATM PhD candidate)*, Kevin Wood (ESS PhD candidate)*, Sandra Penny (ATM PhD candidate)*, Michelle Koutnik (ESS PhD candidate)#, Ted Bohn (CivE PhD candidate) #, Rachel Headley (ESS, PhD candidate) =, Erin Burke (ESS PhD candidate)*, Nichole Feldl (At. Sci. PhD candidate)*, Angela Pendergrass (At. Sci. PhD candidate)*, Brian Smoliak (At. Sci., PhD candidate) =, Nicholas Siler (ESS, PhD candidate) =

=major research advisor,* formal advisor, #committee member (with research input)


 

PUBLICATIONS

 

In preparation:

 

Submitted:

 

Published/in press (peer-reviewed):

 

Invited seminars, talks, and courses:

2009:

University of Delaware, Geography department colloquium, April, 2009. The shape of things to come: what are the potentials and potential limits to global climate predictions?

University of Delaware, Geography department seminar, April, 2009.  Was there a little ice age?

Yale University, Dept. seminar, April, 2009: Extreme weather and the downsizing of the Alps.

University of Edinburgh, School of Geosciences seminar, March 2009: Was there a little ice age?

University of Washington, Seattle, WA, February, 2009: Dept. Atmospheric Sciences colloquium: What do glaciers tell us about climate variability and change?

California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, Environmental Science and Engineering colloquium January, 09: The shape of things to come: what are the limits to global climate predictions?

 

2008:

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science, Distinguished Public Lecture, Boulder, Oct, 2008: The shape of things to come: what are the limits to global climate predictions?

University of Colorado, Boulder, Oct, 2008: Dept. Geological Sciences colloquium: What do glaciers tell us about climate change?

University of Colorado, Boulder, Oct, 2008: Dept. Geological Sciences seminar: The tectonic governor and the downsizing of the Alps.

University of Washington, Seattle, WA, Oct, 2008: Dept. Earth and Space Sciences colloquium: The tectonic governor and the downsizing of the Alps.

Stochastic Climate Modeling Workshop, Victoria, July 2008: Stochastic Ice.

West coast climate initiative workshop, Univ. Southern California, LA, Jun, 2008: Decadal climate variability in the Pacific.

Environmental Protection Agency, Washington D.C., April 2008: The shape of things to come: why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable (and who cares anyway?)

University of Michigan, Dept. of Geological Sciences, April 2008: The tectonic governor: critical form and feedbacks in mountain-belt dynamics.

University of Michigan, Dept. of Applied Math Colloquium, April 2008: Knowability and no ability in climate prediction.

Yale University, Dept. seminar, February, 2008: Glaciers and climate: regional variability vs. change.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Dept. Colloquium, February, 2008. The shape of things to come: why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable (and who cares anyway?).

Harvard University, Dept. seminar, February, 2008: Glaciers and climate: regional variability vs. change.

University of California, Berkeley, Dept. Colloquium, January, 2008: Why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable? Berkeley, CA.

American Mathematical Society, Annual meeting, January, 2008: Why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable? San Diego, CA.

 

2007:

NASA CERES workshop. Victoria, B.C., November 2007: Why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable? Berkeley, CA.

University of Washington, Program on Climate Change lecture series, October, 2007. Glaciers and climate

Brigham Young University, Geology dept. seminar, October, 2007. Why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable?

University of Washington, Atmospheric Science dept. colloquium, September, 2007. Why is climate sensitivity so unpredictable?

Thun, Switzerland, June, 2007. Climate and surface processes workshop: Knowability and no ability in climate and surface processes

Yale University, Flint Visiting Professor, May 2007: Mountain-belt dynamics: climate feedbacks and critical topographic form

National university of Mexico, Mexico City, May 2007: Colloquium: Mountain-belt dynamics: climate feedbacks and critical topographic form

American Geophysical Union, Spring meeting, Acapulco, Mexico, May 2007 On the interpretation of Chinese loess as a paleoclimate proxy.

Arizona State University, School of Earth Sciences and Space exploration, department colloquium, March, 2007: Mountain belt dynamics: climate feedbacks and critical topographic form; research seminar: Reconciling glacier changes and climate

Sanya, China NSF/CNSF workshop on Tibet and climate, January, 2007: On the interpretation of Chinese loess as a paleoclimate proxy.

 

2006:

University of Edinburgh, School of Geosciences, October, 06Reconciling glacier changes and climate

University of Bergen, Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research. Summer school on Multidecadal climate variability and teleconnection dynamics. Lecturer, Sept 06.

University of Colorado, workshop on Milankovitch and climate, Jul, 06. What does Milankovitch and climate really mean?

University of Edinburgh, Earth Sciences department, Hutton Club lecture, June 2006, Rocks, rivers, and rain: feedbacks between climate, erosion and tectonics in mountain belt evolution. Department seminar, June 2006: In defense of Milankovitch.

University of Delaware, Geography department colloquium, April, 2006. In defense of Milankovitch.