Our first #BiGWeek#TweetChat guest for #GeoSustainability is Sarah Morjuetan from Women In Mining, UK @WIM_UK. !
Sarah is a Mining Engineering Masters' graduate from the Camborne School of Mines, UK.
Sarah, thank you very much for taking the time to participate in #BIGWeek Q/A
@WIM_UK Q1: Sarah, can you tell us about geo-sustainability and how this branch of Geoscience impacts our everyday lives?
@WIM_UK Q2: Sarah, What made you interested in this branch of Geoscience? Can you share a little regarding coursework, training, and current positions?
@WIM_UK Q3: Sarah, Can you share some ways that your institutions have been working to implement community engagement to ensure the adaptation of geo-sustainable practices?
@WIM_UK Q4: Sarah, How can geoscientists contribute to the UN sustainable development goals?
@WIM_UK Q5: Sarah, How can universities integrate sustainability into geoscience education, training and professional development?
Finally! @WIM_UK Q6: Sarah, How do we ensure that mining essential minerals is sustainable?
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Geoscience is the most critical science for the 21st century because we have the knowledge that is req for the resources that society needs. Many people don’t realize that the cell phones in their hands have geos working for them in the background. @atekwanae#geosustainability
@atekwanae 🗣️🗣️🗣️ Do people know how important we are? We need a PR campaign to explain how valuable we are to society.
We don’t connect instruments that surgeons use to earth materials and if we make those connections better, we may see more students getting into earth science @atekwanae
Q: Some of the critical steps we can take regarding climate change:
"Be informed (don't just depend on Government or Experts) "
Q: What are some of the benefits of mining and how are we in Africa accessing these benefits?
"Civilization has benefited based on employment, raw materials, Government revenue and much more. For Africa, we are not really accessing the benefits as we are not able to add value"
We picked Dr. Eliot Atekwana's brain and will be posting his responses for the next hour.
Dr. Atekwana is a stable isotope geochemist who addresses basic questions in hydrology, CO2 cycling, and env change.
He has teaching interests in environmental geochemistry, isotope geochemistry, and incorporating experiential learning in courses. Most recently at @ucdavis!
Our panelists have started answering some #ClimateCrisis questions on their profiles. Please check them out or see some of their responses linked below.
We started by asking @OsinachiAjoku, "What is the Paris agreement?"
Today we are talking to Black climate scientists about their experience working in climate science. #BiGWeek2021
@JhordanneJ "We tend to turn a blind eye when a tropical storm or hurricane de-intensifies or becomes a remnant, which is what impacted NY.
The moral of the story is that a hurricane is a rainmaker and smaller less intense storms can do major damage." #BiGWeek2021
@C_Poku93 "White scientists think that we don’t care. But we’ve got to a point where we as Black scientists need to start making our own conversations in the atmospheric sciences because we have the experience that they [white scientists] don’t." #BiGWeek2021