This is the second of a series of blogs about women
in science at the
University of Wyoming, as we initiate our new NSF-funded
program.Throughout the year we will be blogging about women in
engineering, earth sciences, biological sciences and beyond.
Have you ever wondered what Olympians do after the Olympics? Some probably relax, others probably look for new interests, but Laramie’s Olympic skier, Sarah Konrad, is a scientist. Sarah works in science labs at the University of Wyoming helping to conduct various research projects about the environment. Currently, Sarah works in Dr. Neil Humphrey’s geology lab constructing sensors to measure glacier movements. Glaciers happen to be Sarah’s area of specialty.
Have you ever wondered what Olympians do after the Olympics? Some probably relax, others probably look for new interests, but Laramie’s Olympic skier, Sarah Konrad, is a scientist. Sarah works in science labs at the University of Wyoming helping to conduct various research projects about the environment. Currently, Sarah works in Dr. Neil Humphrey’s geology lab constructing sensors to measure glacier movements. Glaciers happen to be Sarah’s area of specialty.
“I was into the outdoors long before I was a scientist,”
Sarah says. “And that interest naturally progressed towards geology and
glaciology.”
Rock climbing and mountaineering initiated Sarah’s interest
in glaciers and now she helps to understand the way glaciers work in Greenland.
“The more we understand about how glaciers work and how they
respond to different changes in the environment, the better we can understand
how fast the water held in the glacier ice will get into the ocean and affect
sea levels,” Sarah says.
Understanding how fast glaciers are melting is an important
part of understanding climate change and its effect on people and where they
choose to live. People disproportionally live near the ocean and this
population will be the first to notice sea level changes. This problem is part
of the reason Sarah loves being a scientist: it challenges her to think about
solutions.
Sarah’s favorite part
of being a scientist is being able to think about things,
such as climate change, creatively and understanding how things work. One of
her current projects outside of Dr. Humphrey’s lab is creating a book about all
the energy resources in Wyoming. This wouldn’t be any book, however. It would
be a road-side guide to Wyoming’s energy resources that would use surface
infrastructure (such as wind turbines or pump jacks) to explain everything in
straightforward terms how Wyoming’s energy production works. Right now, Sarah
is looking for funding to help her research Wyoming’s energy field.
While Sarah is a scientist, she continues to be a phenomenal
athlete. “Science and sports complement each other really well,” Sarah says.
“I’ll be out on a long run or bike ride, and it’s some of my best thinking
time.”
Sarah Konrad at the Torino Olympics in 2006 |
“I’m curious and I
like a challenge,” Sarah says. “Those three years I was training for the
Olympics I didn’t do any science at all and I missed it so much! I mean, I’d
still read and have some sort of intellectual stimulation, but I really like
having more involvement and having some sort of outlet for figuring things out.
It was a relief getting back into science. It felt really good to get the
balance back.”
Sarah balances her love for both science and physical
activity by dividing her day between the two. Part of the day she works in the
lab, and the other part she trains for her next athletic goal. Over the summer,
Sarah trained for a two-day event, the Steamboat Stinger in Steamboat Springs,
Colorado. Most people do one or the other of the events, but Sarah decided to
do both the 50 mile mountain bike race and the 26-mile marathon trail run.
“The real challenge was doing them back to back,” Sarah
says.
Sarah’s athletic passion keeps diversity in her life, which
she says is the key to both science and any career. “Take college electives to
heart,” Sarah advises new college students, especially women. “Because even if
you think you know what you’re going to do, it’s just such a good time to be
exposed to new things.”
Exposure to new things is what opened the doors to the field
of geology for Sarah. She started out as engineering major, and happened to
take a geology class, which changed her whole career path.
“Until you’ve been exposed to an awful lot of things, you
can’t judge what you want to do because you don’t know what choices are out
there,” Sarah says.
By Kali S. McCrackin
Photo credits: USBA
By Kali S. McCrackin
Photo credits: USBA
No comments:
Post a Comment