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Ross McCulloch

rmccullo@eoas.ubc.ca https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/people/rossmcculloch My research focuses on the creation of new instrumental methods and techniques which allow us to study complex biogeochemical cycling processes with marine environments.

Ben O’Connor

bennoconnor@gmail.com https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/people/benjaminoconnor No profile information at the moment.

Carmen Holmes-Smith

carmen.holmes.smith@gmail.com https://www.uvic.ca/science/seos/people/graduates/index.php Investigating patterns between extreme run-up and the offshore wave field with the aim of developing a better forecasting system for wave hazards in Tofino, B.C. 

Brandon McNabb

bmcnabb@eoas.ubc.ca https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/people/brandonmcnabb My project is examining the dynamics behind marine sulfur cycling using a combination of experimental and modelling techniques.

Nazanin Shamshiri

nazaninshamshiri1998@gmail.com https://vixi.cs.uvic.ca/people/nazanin-shamshiri-2021-11-12/ I got my bachelor’s degree in Computer Science from Amirkabir University of Technology, AKA Tehran Polytechnic. I am currently a MSc student in Computer Science at University of Victoria interested in data science. My thesis will focus on data visualization and design studies in ocean sciences. I am currently working with scientists from […]

Jose Valentí Muelas

jvalentimuelas@gmail.com https://mp.ubc.ca/people/jose-valenti-muelas My research aims to include a microbial loop and microplastics dynamics into the SalishSeaCast, a high-resolution ocean model of the Salish Sea. The first piece of my research focuses on describing microplastics distribution, dynamics and fate within the Salish Sea. To do so, I am using SalishSeaCast output to run Ocean Parcels, a […]

Geena Littel

geenalittel10@gmail.com https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/people/geenalittel In short, I study the seismotectonics offshore and onshore western British Columbia. My PhD is aimed at better understanding big-picture tectonics of western British Columbia by studying the diverse flavors of seismicity, from slow fault slip and tectonic tremor in the Cascadia subduction zone to microseismicity offshore in the Queen Charlotte Triple Junction […]

Mohamed Ahmed

mohamed.ahmed3@ucalgary.ca https://geog.ucalgary.ca/manageprofile/profiles/1-10789317 My research is focusing on budgeting the oxygen uptake in the North Pacific using a combination of observations (e.g., Argo floats) and machine learning techniques.

Rebecca Beutel

rbeutel@eoas.ubc.ca https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/people/rebeccabeutel I’m looking at the path of and composition of water entering and leaving the Salish Sea through the Juan de Fuca Strait, by applying Lagrangian particle tracking to three-dimensional physical-biological-chemical ocean circulation models of the region. This knowledge will tell us about the net fluxes of biogeochemical tracers such as dissolved inorganic carbon […]

Wasja Bloch

wbloch@eoas.ubc.ca https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/people/wasjabloch I study ocean dynamics and biogeochemical cycling in the Canadian Arctic using models of trace elements Mn and Pb within a coupled sea-ice ocean model. Building on observations in this region, these models help enhance our understanding of this unique environment and assist the interpretation of future climate-related changes.

Birgit Rogalla

brogalla@eoas.ubc.ca https://www.eoas.ubc.ca/~brogalla/ I study ocean dynamics and biogeochemical cycling in the Canadian Arctic using models of trace elements Mn and Pb within a coupled sea-ice ocean model. Building on observations in this region, these models help enhance our understanding of this unique environment and assist the interpretation of future climate-related changes.

Andrea Scott

ka3scott@uwaterloo.ca https://uwaterloo.ca/scholar/ka3scott My Research Interests include: For more information: https://uwaterloo.ca/systems-design-engineering/about/people/ka3scott Supervised Students

Matías Salibián-Barrera

matias@stat.ubc.ca https://www.stat.ubc.ca/users/matias-salibian-barrera Professor Salibián-Barrera’s research interests are in the areas of robustness, functional data analysis, computational statistics and spatial statistics. He was the winner of the CRM-SSC Prize in Statistics (2015) for his contributions to robust statistics and for developing fast computational algorithms for robust procedures. Supervised Students

Charles Perin

cperin@uvic.ca http://charlesperin.net Charles Perin is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of Victoria, where he co-leads the Victoria Interactive eXperiences with Information (//X) research group specializing in Human-Computer Interaction and Information Visualization.  He and his students are interested in designing and studying new interactions for visualizations, in understanding how people may make […]

Raymond Ng

rng@cs.ubc.ca https://www.cs.ubc.ca/~rng/ I have been engaging in analyzing sensor network data for over 10 years. One of the key techniques we have been working on has been outlier detection in data streams or time series. For many monitoring applications, identifying abnormal events is an important analytic task. Some of our studies in outlier detection from large datasets were published over […]

Jody Klymak

jklymak@uvic.ca https://ocean-physics.seos.uvic.ca/~jklymak/ Physical oceanography: waves, turbulence, fronts, eddies; processes that dissipate energy from the mean ocean circulation and mediate the mixing of momentum, heat, salt, and passive tracers. Our group collects and analyzes seagoing data, and create numerical experiments designed to help us understand small scale ocean flows, and their impacts on large scale flows. […]

Lindsey Heagy

lheagy@eoas.ubc.ca https://lindseyjh.ca I am interested in using Inverse Theory and Machine Learning to build models with geophysical data, with a major emphasis is on the use of electrical and electromagnetic data. Some applications include geologic carbon capture and storage and environmental studies such as locating and classifying unexploded ordnance from electromagnetic data. Supervised Students

Roberta Hamme

rhamme@uvic.ca https://web.uvic.ca/~rhamme/ Understanding what drives the cycles of gases like carbon dioxide and oxygen is essential to understanding our changing planet. I measure a suite of inert and bioactive gases, like argon and oxygen, to investigate oceanic processes. Dissolved inert gases can tell us about how gases move between the atmosphere and the ocean and […]