The Quest University Canada Alumni Association (QUCAA) is now accepting applications for the Keystone Scholarship. This funding initiative was developed by QUCAA with support and input from the Quest University Canada Student Association (QUSA) as an opportunity for students requiring financial support to complete their Keystone. Applications are open until December 15th, 2022. 

The Keystone is a valuable experience and a core component of Quest’s program, sparking immense personal growth and learning. Financial support can enable this quintessential process—and in certain situations, is essential to realizing an ambitious project. 

Scholarship applications are received and reviewed by a group of 4-6 alumni who have volunteered to sit on the review committee. Typically, a successful application underlines the need for financial support and showcases the student’s ability to communicate the nature of their Keystone, their relationship to the project, its origins, and its aspirations. The inaugural awards in 2020 were given to Adam Achs and Gurbani Kaur, and the 2022 awardee is Giulietta Frequet Kohan. 

Giulietta’s question is: “how can physical spaces create a feeling of belonging—and can we make places like this accessible, sustainable, and affordable?”. Consequently, for her Keystone Giulietta will be refitting a camper van into a liveable space—allowing for a physical and theoretical exploration of belonging—of space giving way to a sense of belonging. Giulietta draws parallels between her identity as a female immigrant in Canada)and her interests:  

My Question was born from thinking about my own belonging throughout my life. It is a question that easily comes up when you’re crossing borders. As you change houses, cities, countries and continents, it becomes hard to keep track of where you truly feel at home.” 

The challenges and achievements awaiting Giulietta will leave her in the good company of Quest students before her. The Keystone project of alumnus Jesse Horn (class of 2012) dives into similar intellectual terrain. Such similarities are cause for celebration and emphasize the relevance of the alumni community supporting the current student population. 

As a student, Jesse asked the question, “how can effectively designed environments promote healthy communities?”. In his own words, “[this] question was focused on how the built environment promotes different levels of interaction between people and whether those interactions had a positive or negative effect on the community”. Much to the Quest community’s benefit, Jesse’s Question led to the construction of the climbing gym: 

I designed and proposed the bouldering gym at the end of my second year and spent my third-year winter break building the gym. I felt like Quest needed more spaces on campus for community building and recreation during the rainy months and the bouldering gym seemed like a good fit. My Keystone project was based on collecting data on who used the gym throughout the year and whether there was any statistical significance in the mixing of communities throughout the year. The idea behind this study was that community health is a difficult thing to measure, and therefore it often gets overlooked during urban design and evaluation. My Keystone project was an attempt to create a measure of community health.” 

Spaced nearly ten years apart, Giulietta’s and Jesse’s projects dance around the themes of belonging, community, health. Both ask how physical spaces give way to feelings that are understood cerebrally and emotionally, rather than through tactile connection. This approach highlights a much larger truth that Quest’s academic program was designed around: the world we live in today is not one of neat little boxes, and questions like this can rarely be answered without considering multiple perspectives. While both Jesse and Giulietta might be driven to turn literal boxes (the structures we live, play, and work in) into something much more liveable, in combining the physical and emotional both projects are exemplary of Quest’s vision: interdisciplinary inquiry.  

The Keystone is a fantastic opportunity for each student to pursue inquiry they genuinely care about. Each Keystone has unique creative, academic, and in some cases, financial challenges. The Keystone scholarship fund is in place to make sure students with ambitious plans have the financial opportunity to turn those ambitions into reality.  Any student wishing to apply can find the application linked from the QR code on the poster above (information was also shared with students by email). Completed applications and any questions should be directed to exec@questualumni.ca.  

 

Scientific journals don’t make a habit of publishing undergraduate student’s work — in fact, it’s quite uncommon. However, Will Sherwin (a Quest Alumni) recently proved it’s not impossible. His Keystone research project was recognized in the journal Evolution

Evolution is a high ranking journal in the field of evolutionary biology and it is rare that an undergrad’s work gets published.” says Thor Veen, a Life Sciences Tutor at Quest.

Sherwin’s published keystone evolved naturally from his Question, ‘How can Ethology (the science of animal behavior) Inform Conservation Biology?’

“I have always been fascinated with why animals do what they do and how we can use that understanding to create effective conservation strategies,” explaines Sherwin. “I grew up on a small farm with a spring-fed pond where I would spend all my time reading about and observing turtles and frogs.”

Will Sherwin in the Peruvian Rainforest, 2019. A Quest Field Study block led by Thor Veen.
(Photograph by Thor Veen)

Sherwin’s work has helped to highlight the necessity of rethinking the long-standing dimorphism–richness hypothesis.
That is, females and males of the same species frequently differ in size and structure to utilize their ecological living space.

The hypothesis predicts that when a closely related ecologically similar species arrives the living space is reduced through competition. Thus, the physical differences between the sexes will reduce over time.
However, Sherwin utilized data collected from Mosquito Lagoon, Florida to convincingly demonstrate that the green anole (lizard) species did not change after the introduction of the cuban anole some years ago. Here, half the island had only green anole and half came to have both anole species, but the green anole showed changes in neither sexes. .

“All of the data collected for this project was done in 2010 by Yoel Stuart. Yoel is an amazing man” says Sherwin. “He collected the data for a different project he was working on but did not end up using much of the biometric data he collected. So he had this amazing dataset that was not being used and seemed tailor-made for our question.”

Sherwin is quick to recognize that his accomplishment was an extremely collaborative effort, “I have always wanted to write a paper for publication but I thought it was out of my grasp. Without the constant patience and help from both Yoel and Thor, I would not have even graduated! They really brought me along in the process and I am so grateful to them both.”

Although Sherwin says he was initially drawn to Quest for the Block Program, what he came to appreciate the most are the tutors, “There are some amazing people working there that genuinely want to see you succeed.”

When asked what his advice would be to students who want to emulate his path, Sherwin gives this advice, “Ask tutors and be open to what comes your way! Honestly, I sometimes felt like a hook that got caught in a shark’s mouth! Annoying, but there’s no slowing down a shark!”

Sherwin plans to pursue further specialization, “I am not sure exactly what [the future] looks like as of now, but I am applying to different grad programs and seeing what shakes out.”

 

Dec 17, 2022 | Contributed by Derek Nobert

Haley Batten to compete in Mountain Biking for Team USA; Leah Kirchmann as road biker for Team Canada

Quest University is delighted to share that one of its students and one alumnus will be competing in the upcoming 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Third-year student Haley Batten will compete in Mountain Biking for Team USA. Alumni Leah Kirchmann will be competing as a road biker for Team Canada. Both athletes were part of Quest’s LEAP (Leaders in Elite Athletics Performance) program, which gives high-level athletes and performers a chance to get a great education while thriving in their sport or art.

George Iwama, President of Quest University, is proud of Batten and Kirchmann. “I am very excited about the success of our current and past students in the upcoming Olympics. They represent for me the fact that our community is made up of individuals with passions and dedication. We are trying our best every day to achieve nothing short of the best,” he said.

Haley Batten qualified to compete in Tokyo after her runner-up finish on May 15 at the UCI World Cup in Nove Mesto na Morave in the Czech Republic. The twenty-two-year-old completed the six-lap, 22.2-kilometer women’s elite cross-country Olympic (XCO) race in 1:26:52, averaging 15:32 splits over the course’s five full-circuit loops. Batten was the only U.S. rider to finish in the top eight in the Nove Mesto XCO, automatically qualifying her for the Olympic Games.

Two days before the qualifying win, Batten won gold in the women’s elite cross-country short track (XXC) race, a non-Olympic event, clocking 23:35. The two events were Batten’s first World Cup competitions. She is now set to compete for Team USA as a first time Olympian.

Batten has been racing professionally since 2016. According to USA Cycling, the Park City, Utah native is one of the youngest riders to make the U.S. Olympic Mountain Bike Team. She began cycling at four years old and followed her father into professional competition at nine. Her Olympic dream began after winning her first Junior National Title in 2012, the same year the London Olympics were held.

“That year, I watched Georgia Gould get the bronze and Lea Davison place 11th, but I could not have predicted that I would become teammates with both of them later in my career,” Batten said. “I’m proud to have the support of Specialized Racing and USA Cycling as I chase my Olympic dreams.”

Leah Kirchmann graduated from Quest University in 2013. She will compete in the Tokyo Olympics as a road biker for Team Canada. Both athletes credit Quest with providing the ability to race professionally while continuing their studies.

“I cared deeply about both academics and sport and saw that I didn’t have to sacrifice either one by being part of the LEAP program,” Kirchmann said. “Also, the block program at Quest allowed me to access training camp opportunities and attend important races like the Spring Classics in Europe and World Championships in the fall without missing any classes. These races were instrumental in helping me gain the necessary skills and abilities in my sport to compete at the professional and Olympic level.”

Kirchmann’s road to Tokyo has not been without challenges. She has suffered several injuries but says she focuses on the things she can control when faced with challenges and uses obstacles as opportunities to improve her skills and resiliency.

“I’m looking forward to doing my very best to make Canada proud while competing in Tokyo. The pandemic has challenged us all in different ways this past year, and I hope the Games can be a celebration of athletes overcoming challenges and inspiring us all with their performances,” Kirchmann said.

The Global Files: From Indonesia, Neoprana Soemardjan ’24 names his Top 3 things about Quest, shares an unexpected fact about one of his many hometowns (hint: it’s not in Indonesia) and gives us a list of his Favourites.

Q: What are the Top 3 things about Quest?  

A: The course catalog, the interdisciplinary curriculum, the research opportunities, and the Block system. (Yes, I know that’s 4. I couldn’t choose one to throw out of the list!)

Q: What’s one thing you wish everybody knew about your hometown? 

A: I guess I’ll pick Singapore. (I moved around a lot throughout my childhood, so a choice had to be made.) One thing everyone should know about Singapore is that there is no human being that’s genetically from Singapore, since the first people to get there are actually from Kalimantan.

Q: How is remote learning going so far?  

A: Pretty well, actually! Aside from timezones and occasional blackouts, of course. But hey, those are out of our control, so there’s not much we can do about them. Other than that, pretty great!

Q: What’s the most interesting thing about Cornerstone? 

A: Definitely the level of depth we go into when it comes to the readings and the different ways they can be interpreted in order to learn something from them that, if I were to read them myself without this course, would not have been captured otherwise.

Q: Have you been able to make connections with other students at Quest? 

A: Not yet, but that’s on me. Socializing isn’t exactly one of my strong suits. I’m usually that one gremlin in the corner that watches people like they’re some kind of test subject.

Q: What subjects are you most interested in? Any idea what you want to explore?  

A: Moral philosophy, hands down. I’ve been very interested in the ethical and moral implications of advanced AI and brain-machine interfaces, and how they’ll shape future civilizations for a long while now, and I hope I’ll be able to make some related breakthroughs here at Quest at some point.

Q: Give us a rundown or your favourites! Band? 

A: I absolutely love songs that are have meaning, like the stuff made by Stephen, Tristam, and Unlike Pluto. Feels like there are way too many love songs out there!

Q: Favourite colour? 

A: Black has always felt like an interesting colour. Despite the whole edginess stereotype, it can be used to symbolize the unknown, the undiscovered, that which is a gold mine in the eyes of explorers, those who wish to extend the limits of our reality. Is that not the realm that researchers revel within? Is that not where many forms of novelty lie? Also, it looks great with neon colours, as demonstrated by Tron.

Q: Favourite activities? 

A: Painting and writing have been my go-to stress relievers. Video games and anime count too!

“The Quest community is incredibly kind and open.”

Ben Grayzel ‘19

Your Keystone is a documentary film. Tell us more.

I spent a month in Israel and the West Bank shooting Stranger in Zion. The film uses the story of a young diaspora Jew on a Birthright trip to explore themes of identity, nationalism, and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. I’m excited to share my Keystone with the community on December 18.

Why film?

I’d made a short documentary about cannabis culture in my high school during Oregon’s legalization process. The film went viral on YouTube, and I was interviewed on the local news. The experience made me realize the power of film as a medium.

You’ve made some great videos for Quest! What’s your favourite?

Without a doubt, the greatest video I have made for Quest is the 12-minute documentary-style film, Discover Quest. In my opinion, this video represents what Quest is and what Quest could be. I care a lot about this place so I wanted to share the Quest experience by leveraging the power of video.

Looking back at your time at Quest, if you could do one thing differently, what would it be?

The Quest community is incredibly kind and open, so I would have put myself out there more right away. Now, I know that everyone here seems to really celebrate each other for who they are. I regret not pushing myself to make more connections with the amazing people in this community.

Plans for life after Quest?

I’m moving to southern Mexico after I graduate to refine my Spanish language skills and try living somewhere with a little less rain. I will most likely return to B.C. after a few months to obtain my permanent residency.

“I’m super grateful to have received the Student Project Grant from Quest! Conducting research like this is not easy or affordable, and I am so grateful for the help and support I’ve received to carry out this project.”

Sami Bierman ‘20

Tell us about the project you’re working on. Why is this research important? 

I’m working at a vertical hydroponic farm in Jackson, Wyoming. In addition to providing year-round local produce, the farm employs almost thirty community members with different abilities. I was initially interested in the project because it combines both environmental and social issues. 

My research seeks to document and understand the lived experiences of the employees working at the farm. To do this, I gave participants disposable film cameras and asked them to show me what their job means to them. This participatory method is called Photo Voice and was developed to empower marginalized populations to share their stories and define the parameters of the research. 

Combined with interviews with various community members, I hope to holistically assess the impacts of this model. Findings from my research will help to inform other projects like this one, that are currently being replicated in Lancaster and Chicago. 

How did you first get involved in this work? 

I knew about Vertical Harvest because I grew up in Montana and heard about it when it was first being constructed. I remember seeing it for the first time before I came to Quest and thinkingwow, this is the kind of thing I want to be doing with my lifeCreating innovative solutions to environmental and social issues.  

When I was scrambling for a Keystone in my third year, I reached out to one of the founders and went to Jackson in person to pitch my research project to them. And they accepted my offer! Having support from the institution where I’ve been doing my research has been so helpful. 

Have you learned anything interesting from your research so far? 

It’s taught me to slow down and forced me to really look at my own assumptions and judgements.  

For the last three years I’ve been studying and reading about human geography and neoliberalism etc. Though I had encountered these topics on paper, it was an interesting experience to realize how deeply engrained principles are in my mind and in my day-to-day actions.  

Working alongside people with different abilities challenged these assumptions and principles. I can’t say I’ve fully unlearned all these things, but it’s been eye-opening to confront these tendencies within myself, and to question whether they’re serving me or not. 

What are you plans for life after Quest? 

My family keeps asking me the same question. 

Haha, oops! Well…? 

I’ll return to Idaho for my third season of guiding on the Salmon river, and then it’s an open book! I’m considering a teaching job at a private alternative schoolfounded on principles of human ecology in Idaho, but who knows. I’d like to find work where I can continue to combine concepts of food/community/environment. 

Looking back, what advice would you offer your first-year self? 

Remember that most of your academic stress is self-induced, and don’t forget to take frequent study breaks to run in the rain and dance with your friends. 

That’s great! What’s your favourite space on campus? 

The rock behind the cafeteria that overlooks the Quest community garden. It’s one of the best places to sneak away from the library and watch the sunset. It’s always quieter over there. 

Anything else you’d like to add? 

I’m super grateful to have received the Student Project Grant from Quest! Conducting research like this is not easy or affordable, and I am so grateful for the help and support I’ve received to carry out this project. I also could not have gotten anywhere if it weren’t for the support of my advisor, Dr. Maï Yasué. Thanks, Maï. 

“I’ve really enjoyed getting to know more Quest faculty, all of whom have been wonderfully enthusiastic and supportive.”

-Alice Pearson ’20


Tell us about the unique project you’re working on.

For my Keystone, I’m identifying and cataloguing Dr. Marjorie Wonham’s shell collection, which contains about a thousand seashells from all around the world. It’s mostly molluscs—so things like mussels, clams, scallops, cockles and snails.

The collection has some really cool specimens and great potential as an educational tool; however, it has sat largely unused (except by a few lucky students in Dr. Wonham’s classes) because there is no record of everything it contains. Our hope is that once it’s catalogued, the shells can be shared more widely, both through exhibits and displays, as well as by Tutors for other courses.

I’m so excited about this project! I’ve really enjoyed getting to know more Quest faculty, all of whom have been wonderfully enthusiastic and supportive.

Why is an archive space at Quest important?

The archive is such an important space, both physically and institutionally, because it provides students with an academic workspace to spread out and really get to know the materials they’re working with.

It also creates an academic legacy at Quest and provides students with an opportunity to engage with and build upon previous research. Even though the archive is very new, there’s already a great community among the faculty and students who were involved in its creation and current research projects.

Has Marjorie’s seashell collection taught you anything unexpected?

Every time I work with the shells, I’m surprised by all the subtle nuances and variability in them. I’ve been looking at shells through a variety of lenses, and I keep coming back to the mathematical one. It’s pretty amazing that you can explain such a wide variety of forms using just three parameters in a mathematical model.

There’s a video called Logarithmic Spiral Mollusc Shells on YouTube. It shows the shells morphing from one form to another. It’s mesmerizing!

We’ll check it out! Tell us why you chose Quest.

I chose Quest because of the Block Plan, small campus size and the location. I liked the idea of being able to really focus on one subject, as well as the flexibility you get from having to take only one course at a time.

What’s been your favourite class so far?

That’s a hard one! I took Marine Zoology at the start of my second year with Dr. Tse-Lynn Loh. It was the perfect blend of classroom lecture-style learning and first-hand experience.

I’ve had lots of great classes, but some of my favourites have been What Is Life, Marine Zoology, Plant Biodiversity, and Death of the Author.

Any plans for life after Quest?

Nothing concrete yet. I’ve been looking at a few different options in Northern Alberta. I’ll probably be doing some sort of field work or tree planting, which I did last summer, but I’m waiting to see what comes up within the next few months!

 

“While at Quest, I have gone from a science geek to a philosophy nerd to an education enthusiast.”

-Jesse Genereux ‘20


Becoming a Quest Summer Fellow is a big deal! Tell us how it works. 

I submitted a proposal that identified a gap in the academic literature in my area and created a schedule of how I would use my time during the fellowship. I also required a faculty supervisor, who could speak to my capability as a researcher and oversee my project. An additional faculty member was needed as a supporting reference. After accepting the offer, all that was left was to undertake the project and complete the deliverables! 

Tough question: can you sum up your talk for us in a few sentences? 

There is a gap in the educational theory, which attempts to interpret philosopher Emmanuel Levinas’s work. This gap centres around the generation of ethical people. 

In my project, I began to investigate the questions around this gap. The gap remains, and if we read Derrida (another philosopher) alongside Levinas, the gap becomes more complex and potent concerning decolonization and other central movements today. 

How did you first become involved in this work? 

I first became involved in this work when I was exposed to Levinas’s ideas in a Foundation Humanities course, a Scholarship course on ethics with Dr. Jeff Warren. Jeff became my mentor, and over the next year, I became more and more familiar with the history of philosophy in general and Levinas specifically. I took a Concentration philosophy course with Jeff where I read my first book-length study of Levinas and education. I knew then that this area was for me. Complex systems in nature drew me in from a young age. At Quest, I’ve found more and more complex problems and questions in other disciplines as well. 

Any funny stories about your research? 

There was a 3-week period where I sat outside bathing in the sun while reading Levinas’s Totality and Infinity. That whole period was a blur and felt like one continuous day. Occupational hazard: whole body sunburn except for a book-shaped spot on my chest! 

What’s next for you?

Hopefully a publishable Keystone project! After that, I hope to acquire a Master of Arts in Education followed by a Doctorate of some sort. Long term plans are to influence educational programming at the provincial or international level. I have entertained the idea of coming back and teaching at Quest. 

What’s your favourite thing about Quest? 

The freedom I’ve had to explore my Question. 

I have genuinely enjoyed exposure to a wide variety of disciplines and approaches to knowledge. While at Quest, I have gone from a science geek to a philosophy nerd to an education enthusiast. Being able to express different sides of my academic life has been fulfilling. 

Anything else to add? 

The Summer Fellowship program has been a springboard for a host of reasons. I feel comfortable in my abilities as a researcher, developed contacts at other universities, and have begun the 2019-2020 school year with a Keystone practically finished. I would recommend enthusiastic students to apply. I would also like to take the space here to thank Haby Ka, from the bottom of my heart, for her critical eye and insight supporting my project. 


Come and hear Jesse present his research at the Summer Fellows Research Symposium on Saturday, October 19 from 1:30-2:30pm in the Quest MPR.

You’re in your final year of university! Why did you choose to attend Quest?

I chose Quest because of the Block Plan, and because I couldn’t imagine myself in a university with class sizes over 20 students.

We’re happy to have you, Thea! So, tell us what you’ve been up to with this archive project.

The Strangway Archive is a collection of interesting and rare materials, many of which relate to the NASA Apollo and Voyager missions. The collection was donated a little over ten years ago by the founder and first chancellor of Quest, Dr. David Strangway. Up until this summer, the collection, which includes 3500+ items, was still largely untouched.

I indexed the collection over the summer, and created a budget for how to best preserve the materials for the future, with the help of library staff and Quest faculty.

As the summer went on, I realized the pressing need for a proper archival space at Quest. My mission, which started as a seemingly simple task to catalogue the Strangway Archive, turned into a larger journey of advocating for the establishment of an archive at Quest.

How did you first become interested in this work?

I got involved after Dr. Jamie Kemp introduced us to the Strangway Archive in her Cabinet of Curiosities class. We put on the first ever curated public viewing of the collection in our ‘Moonshot’ exhibition at the end of the Block.

After opening the archival boxes and learning about the history, I didn’t have the heart to put it all back into the cardboard boxes after the course—so I decided to do whatever I could to preserve the collection in the short time I had left at Quest.

And what is your ultimate goal for this project?

My goal is to see through the preservation of the Strangway Archive and the establishment of an official archival space at Quest. I have been applying for grants to cover the cost and working closely with members of staff and faculty to explore different avenues of funding.

I’ve also been working with members of staff and faculty to advocate and apply for an archival space at Quest that would function as a resource centre for other Quest students.

My ultimate goal is a lofty one, but there has been an incredible amount of support for the project from all corners of the Quest community. I will do my part, until the very end, to ensure as much progress as possible before I graduate!

Good for you! What’s one thing you want people to know about the Strangway Archive if they are unable to attend your talk on October 19 at 9-10am in the Quest MPR?

If there is one thing that I wish everyone knew, it’s that an archive at Quest would be beneficial to everyone in the community, not just those personally interested in Strangway’s collection.

An archive at Quest would mean the establishment of a space dedicated to the preservation of scholarly outputs by students and faculty (such as Keystones and faculty research), of artistic outputs (meaning proper care of all the art around campus), and of future donations to Quest. The David Strangway Memorial Archive would be a teaching and resource space available to the wider Quest community that would also serve to continuously stimulate the production and preservation of the institutional history.


  • Thea is talking at the Strangway Archive Presentation on October 19 from 9-10am in the Quest MPR.
  • Following the Strangway Archive Presentation, Thea and Quest’s Interim CAO and Arts & Humanities Tutor (Art History and Visual Studies) Dr. Jamie Kemp will lead a sample class as part of the 2019 Quest Family Weekend activities. Details to be announced after Thea’s talk.
  • Donate to the Strangway Archive Project today!
Photo by: Martyn Unsworth

Fill us in on the background of Mount Meager.

About 10 years ago, rock slopes above Capricorn Creek at the Mount Meager Volcanic Complex (MMVC) failed, in what became the largest landslide in Canadian history. The event caused roughly $10,000,000 in damage, and while no lives were lost, the communities of Pemberton and Pemberton Meadows are still in significant danger of a large runout landslide.

Wow! Tell us about what you’re working on now.

We’ll be implementing a landslide monitoring system at Mount Meager, using a tri-axial geophone and infrasound system, coupled with a weather station and a camera. This is just a fancy way of saying that we will be looking, listening and feeling, with the intention of detecting landslides and other alpine mass movements.

The beauty of this project is that it is collaborative. Our main partner is Weir-Jones Engineering (WJE), a geophysical group out of Vancouver. They have offered equipment, a small honorarium, and lots of time and technical support. They’ll also be using the system we’re helping design and install to create a landslide alarm system for an Innergex power plant at the base of the MMVC.

How did this big project come about?

Dr. Steve Quane and I were driving through the desert in Nevada in a Quest minivan, during a class called Tectonics of Western North America. When I told Steve that I was having trouble picking a direction for my Keystone, he said that he had a colleague, Glyn Williams-Jones, who was working with some newly discovered gas vents up at Mount Meager.

I did some digging into Meager, and what caught my attention was the history of massive landslides. A couple months later, I wrote a grant proposal to create a rudimentary monitoring system. Steve sent it to Glyn, who sent it to Weir-Jones Engineering, who offered to support a more robust version of the project.

Great teamwork! And does this all relate back to the Sea-to-Sky region?

Landslides are a real danger in mountainous regions like the Sea-to-Sky. Just recently, another large one made headlines at a popular recreation site, Mt. Joffre. With rising temperatures and changing weather patterns, we expect to see an increase in these sorts of events.

Why are projects like this important to the community?

The implications of a landslide are multi-faceted. Not only can they “change the face of a backcountry destination,” as the CBC article put it, but they can also destroy communities. We hope that the data we collect can have a real impact on landslide risk-management in the Squamish-Lillooet Regional District (SLRD).

My long-term vision is an event-detection system that has a direct link to SLRD emergency coordinators. Research has identified potential landslide sources that are large enough to hit Pemberton. In an event such as this, having an alarm is critical to public safety.

Thanks, Mason! That’s really great work. Anything else you’d like to add?

I am exceedingly grateful for all the support that I have received through this project. I’d like to thank my mentor, Steve Quane, without whom this would never have happened! I would also like to thank Glyn Williams-Jones from SFU for his incredible work at the heart of all research at Meager.

A huge thanks goes to the Quest Summer Fellowship Program for supporting my research this season. Finally, I’d like to extend sincere gratitude for the undying expertise, support and patience of Iain Weir-Jones and Michael Trevorrow.

Okay, one last question… what’s your favourite thing about Quest?

The Block Plan, hands down! Having the ability to focus on one thing at a time make projects like this one not only possible, but exciting to pursue.


Dr. Glyn Williams-Jones will be presenting at this year’s Tyler Heilman Memorial Colloquium to kick off 2019 Quest Family Weekend on October 17 at 6-7:30pm in the Quest MPR. This talk is free and open to the public.
Donate to the Tyler Heilman Memorial Colloquium

Quest University Canada is suspending regular academic programming following
completion of the current academic year in April 2023.

X
WordPress Image Lightbox Plugin