Skip to main content
Overview
Affiliations
AffiliationTelephone
Professor in the Department of Geography+44 (0) 191 33 41955

Biography

My research is focussed on glaciers and ranges from monitoring small mountain glaciers over the last few decades to large-scale reconstructions of ice sheets over tens of thousands of years. A common theme of much of my work is the use of remote sensing (e.g. satellite imagery), which allows repeat monitoring of changes in present-day glaciers and provides an efficient means to visualise and investigate the landforms left behind by former ice sheets during the last ice age.

Together with postgraduate students, postdoctoral researchers and collaborators from both the UK and abroad, recent research can be grouped under the following broad themes:

Measuring and monitoring the response of glaciers to recent climate change: this involves both satellite remote sensing and field-based studies to investigate how glaciers are responding to recent climate change and variability, with a particular focus on glaciated regions of Russia (e.g. the Caucasus, Russian High Arctic islands and Siberia), Norway, and major outlet glaciers in Greenland and East Antarctica.

Reconstructing former ice sheet and ice stream dynamics: this work uses satellite imagery to map glacial landforms left behind by former ice sheets in order to reconstruct their evolution and links to the ocean-climate system. Early work focussed on locating and reconstructing the behaviour of fast-flow features, known as ice streams, and this has since evolved into looking at their role in the deglaciation of former ice sheets. A key component of this work has been to assess how well numerical ice sheet models reproduce ice stream dynamics, which has implications for predicting and modelling future ice sheet behaviour. Whilst much of this work has been focussed on the North American (Laurentide) Ice Sheet, I’ve contributed to studies on all of the world’s major ice sheets.

Investigating the formation of subglacial bedforms: satellite imagery is an efficient technique to map a variety of glacial landforms created by glaciers and ice sheets. Recent work has contributed towards the collection of large datasets of landform characteristics and these have been used to formulate and test ideas about their formation (e.g. drumlins and mega-scale glacial lineations) and refine numerical models of ice flow over sediments. These datasets have also been used to help interpret recent geophysical evidence of subglacial bedforms beneath ice streams in Antarctica.

Glacial landforms and landscapes on Mars: imagery of Mars is now comparable (and, in places, much better) than that for the Earth’s surface. Based on Earth analogues, recent work has investigated the potential role of glaciers (and liquid water) in shaping Martian landscapes.

My research contrubutions have been recognised through the award of a Philip Leverhulme Prize and the British Society for Geomorphology’s Gordon Warwick Medal. I have served on the Editorial Board for the Journal of Maps (2012-2016) and Geology (2018-2021) and have served on the Editorial Board for The Cryosphere since 2012. I have also served as Vice-President (2013-2015) and President (2015-2017) of the International Glaciological Society's British Branch.

Former PhD Students
  • Greta Ferloni (2024): Cryomobilities: Vessel mobilities amidst the ice-prine waters of the Bering Strait
  • Jennifer Arthur (2022): Satellite remote sensing of supraglacial lakes in East Antarctica
  • Laura Seddon (2022): Measurement, knowledge, and representation: a sociological study of Arctic sea-ice science
  • Mihaela Newton (2022): The origin of bedrock mega-grooves in glaciated terrain
  • Joshua Leigh (2022): Fluctuations of mountain glaciers in northern Norway throughout the Holocene
  • Arminel Lovell (2021): Explaining recent heterogeneous glacier change in the Annapurna Conservation Area, central Himalayas
  • Emily Hill (2020): The past and future impact of ice tongue loss on outlet glaciers in northern Greenland
  • Bertie Miles (2017): The patterns and drivers of recent outlet glacier change in East Antarctica
  • Hannah Bickerdike (2017): The glacial geomorphology of the Loch Lomond (Younger Dryas) Stadial in Britain
  • Christopher Darvill (2015): The nature and timing of glaciation in southermost South America.
  • Rachel Carr (2014): Ice-ocean-atmosphere interactions in the Arctic Seas.
  • Robert Storrar (2014): Reconstructing subglacial meltwater dynamics from the spatial and temporal variation in the form and pattern of eskers.
  • Andrew Turner (2013): Deglaciation of the Great Glen, Scotland: reconstructed from geophysical surveys and landform mapping.
  • Philip Prescott (2013): Quantifying subglacial roughness and its link to glacial geomorphology and ice speed.
  • Heather Channon (2012): Multi-scale analysis of the landforms and sediments of palaeo-ice streams.
  • Victoria Brown (2012): Ice stream dynamics at the north-western margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet.
  • Katie Grant (2010): Changes in glacier extent since the Little Ice Age and links to 20th/21st Century climatic variability on Novaya Zemlya, Russian Arctic.
Ph.D. Student Supervision (External)
  • Oliver Hall, University of St Andrews (IAPETUS 2 DTP)
  • Emma Carr, Newcastle University (IAPETUS2 DTP)

Esteem Indicators

  • 2016: Durham University ‘Excellence in Doctoral Supervision Award’: “The purpose of these awards is to promote, recognise and reward excellence in doctoral supervision. The award will be made to members of the University's staff who can demonstrate excellence in the supervision of doctoral students, including those studying for the PhD, professional doctorates, and the PhD with integrated studies”
  • 2013: British Society for Geomorphology Gordon Warwick Award: “Awarded for excellence in geomorphological research by someone within 15 years of being awarded their doctorate
  • 2009: Philip Leverhulme Prize: Awarded to outstanding scholars or practitioners (normally under the age of 36) who have made a substantial and recognised contribution to their particular field of study, recognised at an international level, and whose future contributions are held to be of correspondingly high promise

Publications

Chapter in book

Journal Article

Other (Print)

Supervision students