Speakers Biographies

EXPLORE 2015 SPEAKERS BIOGRAPHIES Ignacio Acosta Ignacio is an artist working with photography and exploring power dynamics in minerals, geographies and historical narratives. His practice based PhD Copper Geographies investigates links between extractive ecologies of the Atacama Desert, Chile and global centres of consumption and trade in Britain. In collaboration with Jakub Bojczuk, he is currently developing Mapping Domeyko, a project trying to reconstruct the adventures and endeavours of pioneering Polish mineralogist, Ignacy Domeyko (1802-1889). Ignacio is part of the research project Traces of Nitrate: Mining history and photography between Britain and Chile, developed at the University of Brighton, in collaboration with photographer Xavier Ribas and Art and Design historian Louise Purbrick, with the support of the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Communicating your discoveries: Artists in the Field workshop www.ignacioacosta.com

Felicity Aston Felicity's expeditions include a 59-day ski across Antarctica (the only woman to have done so alone), leading the Commonwealth Women's Antarctic Expedition involving a team of 8 novices skiing to the South Pole, leading the first British women's expedition to cross Greenland, a 700km winter crossing of Lake Baikal and an expedition to trace the footsteps of Victorian Explorer Kate Marsden in Yakutsk and North-East Siberia Felicity was the leader of the Pole of Cold expedition, winner of the Society's 2013 Land Rover Bursary a 3-month, 30,000km journey to chase winter across northern Europe and Siberia to the Pole of Cold - the coldest inhabited place in the world. Polar workshop www.felicityaston.com @felicity_aston

Philip Avery Phil Avery is Director of Learning & Strategy for the Bohunt Education Trust, but he's as likely to be found up a hill with students as he is in the classroom. Phil has led student expeditions to Greenland and the remote Himalayas, which are focused on scientific fieldwork, media communication and the development of personal attributes. He is currently planning a remote supervision expedition for Sixth Formers. He has also taken part in a number of teacher expeditions (Belarus, Iceland, South Africa and Antarctica), is a Mountain and Mountain Bike Leader, loves cycle touring and runs an Outdoor Programme that sees over 700 students a year spend two or more nights under canvas. He and his school believe that fieldwork and the outdoors are central to student development. Friday night lecture & Education workshop www.bohunttrust.co.uk @MrPhilAvery

Speakers Biographies

Dr Arita Baaijens Arita Baaijens is a biologist, author, photographer. Twenty years ago she gave up her job as an environmentalist, bought camels and made a solo crossing across the Western Desert of Egypt. Today she has made over 25 expeditions (3-6 months at a time) with her own caravan of camels and is the first Western woman to have travelled the whole of the northern desert of Sudan on camel. She is also the first Western woman to have travelled the Forty Days Road twice. One of her discoveries is a hidden valley in the Eastern desert of Sudan with hundreds of petroglyphs depicting cows. In Mauritania she recently met the last remaining local female caravaneers of West Africa. This summer she traveled on horseback through the Altai Mountains in Siberia, in search for Shambala. Her most recent book is Desert Songs, a woman explorer in Egypt and Sudan (Auc Press, 2008, Egypt) Desert and savannah workshop www.aritabaaijens.nl

Lawrence Ball Lawrence recently won a PhD scholarship to continue his research on rangeland management and biodiversity conservation in the Dhofar Mountains of Oman. He has also been involved in scientific expeditions to Madagascar, the Peruvian Amazon and subarctic Finland. He is currently involved in running

an expedition to Madagascar to investigate forest edge-effects. He is also an avid science-communicator through a number of online and printed media. His career goal is to manage research-informed conservation projects using cross-disciplinary approaches to inform environmental policy in biodiverse regions. Biological sciences workshop www.lawrenceballconservation.com @Lawrence_Ball

Suzy Bennett Suzy Bennett is an award-winning travel photographer, writer and editor. Her work is published in national and international titles, including Time magazine, The Telegraph and The Guardian. Suzy specialises in covering off-the-beatentrack destinations; assignments have seen her diving the World War One shipwrecks of Scapa Flow in Scotland’s Orkney Isles, tracking mountain gorillas in Rwanda and meeting tribesmen in Papua New Guinea. She is an editor at adventure magazine Sidetracked.

Communicating your discoveries: Photography workshop www.suzybennett.com @RoamingSooze

Jakub Bojczuk Passionate about transport links and logistics, Jakub has a Masters in Transport Planning at the University of Westminster. He currently is a Route Manager (Revenue Management) at IAG Cargo where he has been specialising in developing new processes as part of the British Airways and Iberia merger. Previously he worked at London Borough of Richmond delivering sustainable workplace travel plans. He is a keen adventurer and has long-standing selftaught practice of drawing imaginary transport maps. He is currently developing Mapping Domeyko in collaboration with artist Ignacio Acosta, a research project inspired by journeys of the Polish mineralogist, Ignacy Domeyko (1802-1889) for an exhibition at Laznia, Centre for Contemporary Arts, Gdansk, Poland in 2017. Communicating your discoveries: Artists in the Field workshop www.kubaspassages.weebly.com

Speakers Biographies

James Borrell James Borrell is a conservation biologist currently studying for a PhD at Queen Mary, University of London. James has been involved with expeditions and fieldwork in a diverse range of environments, including Lapland, Madagascar, Oman, Borneo, Peru and South Africa. His research interest focuses on the population genetics of rare species, particularly gene flow in fragmented forest habitats. James is also keen advocate of citizen science and recently launched Discover Conservation, a social enterprise highlighting the work of field scientists, whilst raising funds for the next generation of young conservationists. Saturday lecture, Tropical Forest panel http://jamesborrell.co.uk/ @James_Borrell

Jamie BuchananDunlop Jamie is director of Digital Explorer, an organization that creates education programmes based on expeditions and fieldwork. He is interested in communicating from the field and is happy to try to answer questions on: using the web, digital media (including filmmaking), Google Earth and the like, GPS, remote communications, youth expeditions and how to make your expedition relevant to the classroom. He has been on expeditions to India, Pakistan, Tibet, Morocco, Oman, Antarctica and the Arctic. He has been a member of the RGSIBG Council and sat on the Society's Education Committee. Education workshop www.digitalexplorer.com @de_updates

Dr Carl Cater Dr Carl Cater is a senior lecturer in tourism at Aberystwyth University, Wales and his research is on experiences and behaviour in travel, with a particular interest in adventure tourism and ecotourism. He has undertaken field research, supervision and teaching worldwide, including Australia, China, Nepal, New Zealand, Norway, Papua New Guinea, Tibet and Vanuatu. He is a qualified pilot, diver, lifesaver, mountain and tropical forest leader, and maintains an interest in both the practice and pursuit of sustainable outdoor tourism. He is co-editor of the Encyclopaedia of Sustainable Tourism (CABI, 2015), co-founder of the Adventure Tourism Research Association (ATRA) and is on the editorial board of several tourism journals. Human Sciences field research workshop www.aber.ac.uk @AberSMB

Emily Chappell Emily Chappell worked for several years as a cycle courier in Central London, before setting off to cycle round the world. So far she has covered Asia, via Iran, Pakistan and China, and ridden solo from Anchorage to Seattle in winter. This summer she changed the pace, and competed in the 4,500km Transcontinental Race across Europe. Well aware that people have been cycling round the world for over a century, and wanting to make her adventure relevant to the needs and interests of today's world, she has consistently tried to tell new stories, and to explore corners of the world and facets of long-distance cycling that usually remain hidden. Emily's first book will be published by Faber in January 2016. Cycling panel www.thatemilychappell.com @emilychappell

Speakers Biographies

Luce Choules Luce is a visual artist with an international practice working mainly in still and moving image and the intermedia between sculpture and performance. Luce's art deals with an exploration of the Earth's surface – unfixed topographical features and fluent spatial dynamics, envisioned as the activated spaces of landscape to be surveyed and mapped. Travelling between object and situation, expeditions form a framework for the artist's itinerant practice of fieldwork – where a performance takes place, artworks are made and documents are generated. Luce is a Fellow of the RGS-IBG, and founder/coordinator of itinerant artist network TSOEG (Temporal School of Experimental Geography). She has presented academic papers on the subject of artist-led fieldwork, fieldwork as aesthetic medium and artform, including observations on geographic and peripatetic arts practice. www.tsoeg.org Communicating your discoveries: Artists in the Field workshop www.lucechoules.com , www.guidetohere.com, www.guide74.com

Rebecca Coles Rebecca Coles is a Mountaineering Instructor, Expedition Leader and Field Studies Guide based in Sheffield. She also has a PhD in Glacial Geomorphology from the University of Sheffield. She is keen mountaineer, skier and climber and this has taken her to all seven continents, and particularly to Nepal and Central Asia. Her expeditions have included making first ascents in South Georgia, Antarctica and, more recently, exploratory mountaineering in Tajikistan and Afghanistan, and an ascent of Peak Lenin (71034m) in Kyrgyzstan. Rebecca also enjoys travel in general and in 2011 spent 9 months travelling back from Nepal to the UK overland spending time in Central Asia and the Southern Caucasus. When in the UK she enjoys rock climbing in North Wales and the Peak, and Scottish winter routes as well as writing articles on expeditions and is a contributor to Trek and Mountain magazine. Mountaineering and trekking workshop www.allbutessentialtravel.com @allbutessential

Alicia Colson Alicia Colson has been an archaeologist since 1990 and has a PhD in Archaeology from McGill University. She has mapped and recorded US archaeological sites of White Otter Lake, the Turtle River system, the Brightsands River system, and conducted the most recent survey of pictograph sites on the Lake of the Woods in subarctic central Canada. In Antigua she identified human remains of the sailors of Nelson’s Navy. She specialises in rock images (called rock art) and draws on research tools developed in digital humanities and computing science. She was Chief Scientist for the British Exploring Society Craters and Canyons 2014 Expedition to Namibia to find, survey and record the rock image sites in the north-eastern valleys of the Brandberg, Namibia. Human Sciences field research workshop http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Alicia_Colson

Dave Cornthwaite Dave Cornthwaite left his day job in 2005 to see if he could find a way of enjoying Mondays. These days he is an adventurer, author and experienced speaker who has motivated and entertained thousands of people on six continents. He has completed eleven journeys of Expedition 1000: 25 separate expeditions of at least 1000 miles in distance, each using a different mode of non-motorised transport. He has descended the Murray, Mississippi and Missouri by kayak, SUP and swimming, and has over 19,000 miles of humanpowered overland miles under his belt so far. And yes, he now very much likes Mondays. Rivers and other adventurous projects www.davecornthwaite.com @DaveCorn

Speakers Biographies

Nicholas Crane As a young geography graduate, Nick Crane helped to create an award-winning national cycling network that became the subject of his first book. Since then he has written another 10 books and presented over 80 geographically-related BBC radio documentaries and films, including Coast, Map Man, Great British Journeys, Britannia and Town. He is a recipient of the RGS-IBG Ness Award and RSGS Mungo Park Medal. Nick has raised money and awareness through expeditions in Africa and Asia for Intermediate Technology (now Practical Action) and has worked for Afghanaid on a field project in the Hindu Kush. With his cousin, Dr Richard Crane, Nick was the first to reach the Pole of Inaccessibility in central Asia, and first to walk the 10,000-kilometre mountain watershed of Europe, a solo expedition that led to Clear Waters Rising, which won the Thomas Cook / Daily Telegraph Travel Book Award. Opening address (Saturday) http://bit.ly/1G5kq36

Kieran Creevy Expedition chef and international mountain leader Kieran Creevy has, over the years cooked a 6 course tasting menu from a base camp tent, served wild boar râgu with pumpkin gnocchi on an overnight snow-hole camp, and grilled Arctic char stuffed with wild mushrooms over an open fire in northern Finland. He has run expedition cooking workshops for The North Face, Marmot, & Kendal Mountain Festival. And, for last few years designed cooking wild recipes for Sidetracked magazine. With 25 years experience cooking in private homes, industrial kitchens, ski chalets, Scottish bothies, Alpine huts, bivis and on various expeditions Kieran will demonstrate that not only is it easy to eat well in the outdoors, but with some imagination and simple tips you can whip up gourmet one-pot meals to surprise your friends almost anywhere. Expedition food demonstration

Joe Debens Jo has been teaching Geography for 6 years and after successfully building a quality Geography department in Portsmouth is now Head of Humanities at Eggar's School in Alton, Hampshire. As an Expert Teacher for the Global Learning Programme Jo is involved with cross-curricular liaison between partner schools at all phases, including developing international links with real and virtual fieldwork. Jo is a keen traveller and has led student expeditions to Iceland and Morocco as well as within the UK. She enjoys climbing and walking her Border Collie, as well taking part in many educational schemes. Jo is a lead teacher for the Prince's Teaching Institute for Geography, and is particularly involved with developing the use of technology in education which has led to becoming a Microsoft Innovative Teacher award winner, and recently a Google Certified Teacher. Education workshop (Sunday) http://jodebens.com @geodebs

Shara Dillon Born and raised in Zimbabwe and South Africa, Shara Dillon has a deep love for the African wilderness. Primarily a sport and outdoor education school teacher, Shara builds adventure travel and expeditions around her teaching career. Following many self-drive journeys around Southern Africa, she recently undertook a solo overland drive over 8 months from Kenya to Cape Town in her Land Cruiser. Documenting these trips through photography and keeping an online journal has allowed Shara to recount her experiences and use digital media to motivate others to venture outdoors more. In the past, Shara has been heavily involved with the Duke of Edinburgh's Award, leading walking and canoeing expeditions, sailing tall ships, and teaching navigation & survival skills. Vehicle dependent expeditions panel (Saturday) www.london2cape.com

Speakers Biographies

Hannah Engelkamp Hannah Engelkamp is a travel writer and ex-outdoor-magazine editor who took leave of her senses, bought an opinionated donkey called Chico, and set off to walk 1000 miles around the circumference of Wales. The adventure was surprisingly tough, but nothing compared to the subsequent excitement of running a hugely ambitious seat-of-pants crowdfunding campaign. It was successful, coming in 25% over budget with 831 funders from all over the world. Come and find out about how crowd funding changes everything, why it is perfectly suited to adventures, and get the lowdown on running your own campaign. Saturday morning lecture & Writing workshop www.hannahme.com

Seth Ford Seth has climbed and skied all over Europe, Asia and Africa. This year his greatest achievements were successfully completing a two day alpine route of Grade D in the Pyrenees that he had been turned back twice by weather, and climbing a multi pitch rock route of Grade TD high up in the Pyrenees. Seth also has experience leading expeditions, having led a spur of the moment, yet completely brutal expedition to Norway in winter. He is highly driven by travel and exploration of the unknown, and was particularly inspired for his most recent expedition inKyrgyzstan after reading ‘Among the Mountains’ and ‘A short walk in the Hindu Kush’. Seth is currently teaching Physics however is continuously dreaming up new ventures and plans! Mountaineering and trekking panel

Oliver Forster Oliver Forster is an environmental geosciences student at the Edinburgh University. In the summer of 2015 he was the Scientific Officer & Environmental Manager on the Karakoram Anomaly project, led by Sergiu Jiduc. Research has taken Oliver all over the world, from Jamaica’s coral reefs to the Himalayas. In the Himalayas he studied the role of glacial lake outburst floods in the 2010 ‘Cloudburst’ event – the extreme convective storm that devastated the people and partly the region of Ladakh. He is studying a master’s course with sustainable development charity Forum for the Future. Through the masters he has done a series of 6-week sustainability projects with some of the UK’s biggest companies, including Marks & Spencer and Standard Life.

www.karakoram.co

William Fox William is the Director of the PAW Conservation Trust, a South African nonprofit organisation. Over the last ten years he has studied wild free-roaming leopard behaviour. He manages the Ingwe Leopard Research programme, which has developed a number of human conflict resolution methods and projects that implement these. With his wife Ann, they manage a research camp on the Thaba Tholo Wilderness reserve in Mpumalanga, South Africa. As Operations Director for WildEarth Media, he is developing a number of projects from virtual tourism, through to extension of our leopard research programs utilising live camera traps broadcasting to a team of citizen scientists for data analysis and interaction with field research teams, and in one case antipoaching patrols. www.ontracksfoundation.org

Speakers Biographies

Rob Fraser A professional photographer for the past 30 years, Rob has worked on commissions all over the world. Becoming a guide for KE Adventure in 2003 only helped to open up his horizons to wilder parts of the planet and he has gone on to lead more than 70 treks during this time. Recent trips have taken him to the altiplano of Bolivia, the Celestial Mountains of Kazakhstan and Dolpa in Nepal. A sucker for punishment he often lugs an old-fashioned large format camera on his travels as well as pro-Nikon digital gear. In 2012 he formed the collaborative practice somewhere nowhere with his wife, Harriet, a writer, with the main aim to use creativity as a tool to help raise awareness of the wonder and the value of the natural world and the cultures that work closely with the land. They have just started a major project called The Long View, which will see them journey repeatedly to seven lone trees spread across Cumbria over a two year period. Communicating your discoveries: Photography workshop i-porter.co.uk

Elliot Graves Elliot Graves is a geography graduate from Durham University and Director of FOXEP Productions, a creative media production house. Working internationally, Elliot has professional experience in photography, cinematography, design and web development. He also has skills in radio production, receiving awards from Global Radio and BBC Radio 1, recognising his technical achievements. Beyond his academic and media work, Elliot also has experience in live event production and is a skilled mechanic, having worked on various competitive motor racing vehicles. He was media producer of the Into No Man’s Land expedition.

http://www.intonomansland.org @elliot_graves

Dr Claire Grogan Claire is medical doctor with a passion for expedition and remote medicine. She has provided medical support for expeditions in jungle, dessert and mountainous environments across the world. She was the lead medic for the BBC documentary 'Highest Classroom on Earth which saw her support a large group of students with special educational needs trekking in the Himalaya's. She has also worked with British Exploring' Project New Horizons in Iceland with young people engaged with Catch 22's services. Whilst working at a high altitude rescue post in the Himalayas in Spring 2015, she was caught up in the 7.8M earthquake that struck Nepal, and along with a colleague joined Australian Himalayan Foundation's relief team to deliver Aid in a remote mountainous region of the Lower Solukhumbu. Mountaineering and trekking panel

Justin Hall With a passion for cultural and environmental issues Justin has spent much of his life crisscrossing the planet, report on, filming, presenting and producing a variety of productions for the Discovery and National Geographic channels. His first expedition in 2000 showed how satellite and web technologies could be used to track, chart and communicate expeditions as he journeyed among the tribes of South America. Reporting on illegal wildlife trade, child slavery, deforestation, gold mining, cocaine production, piracy and more, In recent years Justin has been on operations in Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Belize, Borneo, Djibouti, Colombia, Congo and Libya. Justin is also one of the new faces of National Geographic’s flagship global series ‘Explorer’. Saturday morning lecture & Communicating your discoveries: Film www.rippleeffect.co @ExplorerJustinH

Speakers Biographies

Andrew Harper Since walking across Australia following the Tropic of Capricorn in 1999, Andrew Harper has led over 130 camel expeditions in all of Australia’s nine major deserts. In 2007 he founded Australian Desert Expeditions, conducting scientific surveys with national research institutions. When not walking deserts, he takes to the water and kayaks the inland rivers. His next 'project' is to gather support to make his home town of Deniliquin a 'plastic bag free' community. In 1999 he brought to fruition a 17 year dream of walking across Australia along The Tropic of Capricorn, a 229 day, 4637 kilometre journey raising funds for the Royal Flying Doctor Service. Desert and Savannah workshop www.andrewharper.com.au

Rebecca Harris Rebecca Harris began her TV career as a designer for the BBC Natural History Unit. After assisting in the wilds of Alaska, filming lemmings in the snow, her career was never quite the same again! She gave up her UK based TV design job and two expeditions followed – to the Antarctic and Arctic. Her Arctic expedition, endorsed by RGS-IBG, was fully sponsored by American Express. Two years later, Rebecca returned to TV as an Assistant Producer using her expedition skills to compliment her television work. She is currently a freelance series producer and credits include – Stephen Tompkinson's Great African Balloon Adventure, ‘Joanna Lumley's Nile’, ‘Brazil with Michael Palin’, 'Noah's Ark with Joanna Lumley' and ‘Wild Australia with Ray Mears’. Most recently she's been developing a wildlife series in Africa for National Geographic and her own series ideas for BBC, ITV1 and Channel 4. Communicating your discoveries: Film

Martin Hartley One of the world's leading expedition and adventure travel photographers, Martin Hartley specialises in documenting the most inaccessible places on earth. He has documented 20 unique polar assignments and is one of the only professional photographers to have crossed the Arctic Ocean on foot and with dogs (Adventure Ecology Top of the World Trans-Arctic Expedition 2006, Catlin Arctic Survey 2009 and 2010). His first book Face to Face: Polar Portraits was published in collaboration with the Scott Polar Research Institute.

Communicating your discoveries: Photography www.martinhartley.com @MartinRHartley

Jason Ingamells Jason Ingamells is Company Director of Woodland Ways Bushcraft & Survival providing an extensive array of Bushcraft training, overseas expeditions and expedition support. He has extensive practical applied experience of Desert Travel and Desert Survival Strategies. Jason is also a stake holder in Wild Earth Productions Ltd, providing remote location production support to TV, advertising, moving images and advertising. He is also Director of the charity Woodland Ways Bushcraft Foundation providing support to a remote Maasai community in the Rift Valley of Kenya.

Mountain and trekking expeditions workshop http://www.woodland-ways.co.uk/

Speakers Biographies

Caroline Jackson Caroline Jackson has just completed her Masters in Disasters, Adaptation and Development at King’s College, London. Her thesis research involved an expedition to the Philippines with two coursemates, partly funded by an RGSIBG Geographical Fieldwork Grant. They spent spent four weeks in a small Filipino city completing theirr research on Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) perceptions and participation. She is here to share with you her experiences, offer any advice and most of all encourage others to realise that these expeditions ARE possible with a bit of dedication and planning!

Human Sciences field research workshop

Gabriel Jamie Gabriel has been watching birds from an early age beginning in and around Cape Town, South Africa. His love of natural history has led him to do fieldwork in many exciting places around the world including Ghana, Zambia, Peru, Greece and Romania. This work ranges from researching fundamental processes in ecology and evolution to carrying out surveys of remote and littleexplored areas. Gabriel is currently a PhD student at the University of Cambridge studying a radiation of finches in Africa that forego their parental duties and instead lay their eggs in the nests of other bird species.

Biological Sciences field research workshop http://www2.zoo.cam.ac.uk/africancuckoos/people/jamie/gabrieljamie.html

Sergiu Jiduc Sergiu Jiduc is a postgraduate student at Imperial College in London. Over the summer of 2015, he led a 2 month fieldwork expedition called the 'The Karakoram Anomaly Project' in the Karakoram mountains of Pakistan. He and his team trekked and climbed, collecting data using GPS surveying techniques, geomorphic mapping and repeat photography tools, in order to quantify the likelihood of recurrence of glacial lake outburst floods as a result of surging glaciers in Shimshal valley. The team also carried out community development workshops in Shimshal village and in Islamabad in order to aid the natural disaster prevention and adaptation scheme in the region. In addition, the team attempted to ascend Yukshin Gardan Sar (7530m) via the unclimbed south face. This project was awarded a Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Geographical Fieldwork Grant for 2015. Sunday morning lecture www.karakoram.co @thekarakoram

Stephen Jones Steve has worked in Antarctica for nine years for Antarctic Logistics & Expeditions LLC the company that flies nearly all polar expeditions and mountaineers into Antarctica. For the last six years he was the manager of their base in Antarctica with responsibility for the safety and logistical support for all field parties. He has been on 31 expeditions and has varied experience in mountaineering, jungle and polar environments. He has organised mountaineering expeditions to Alaska, Canada, Greenland, Pakistan and Russia. In the Arctic he has guided expeditions to Alaska, Arctic Canada, Greenland, Spitsbergen and Last Degree expeditions to the North Pole. He skied across the Greenland Icecap, has been on mountaineering expeditions to many cold places and has helped several British polar adventurers to organise their solo polar expeditions. He was a Country Director for Raleigh International for seven years in South-East Asia, Africa, Central and South America. He is an expert on polar expedition planning and the safety management of remote expeditions. Arctic and Polar expeditions workshop www.antarctic-logistics.com @AntarcticSteve

Speakers Biographies

Sam Jones Sam Jones is an ornithologist and conservation scientist. An avid birder and naturalist from childhood, he has wide-ranging field experience across six continents, primarily in remote biodiversity assessment expeditions in montane tropical forests and studying the basic ecology of poorly known and threatened birds. Sam is the senior ornithologist for Operation Wallacea’s longstanding cloud-forest monitoring programme in Honduras and currently undertaking his PhD as part of the NERC London Doctoral Training Partnership. Sam is dedicated to the communication of natural history, producing recent content for the BBC Natural History Unit (for BBC Radio 4) and Scientific American. Biological Sciences research workshop & Publishing your results @samuel_ei_jones

Quintin Lake Quinton Lake is a fine art photographer with over 20 years of expedition experience in jungle, arctic and desert environments and travels in over 70 countries. His large format prints based on the themes of harmony and serenity have been exhibited and published extensively. Photo awards include categories in Travel Photographer of the Year, Outdoor Photographer of the Year and International Photo Awards. In 2013 his blog won Wordpress editors choice. His Latest photo project, The Perimeter, is based on walking 10,000km around Britain's coast over 5 years. Communicating your discoveries: Photography http://theperimeter.uk @QuintinLake

Neil Laughton Neil Laughton is a former Royal Marine Commando and Special Forces Officer currently running Management Training Company, Laughton & Co. He is an entrepreneur, pilot and adventurer. He has founded eight companies in various industries, has a passion for aviation holding licences for paragliders, paratrikes, aeroplanes and helicopters. He has travelled to 85 countries and led expeditions on seven Continents. Neil has completed the Explorers Grand Slam, was the first person to jetski around the UK and piloted the world's first road legal flying car on a 10,000 km journey from London to Timbuktu including flights across the Straits of Gibraltar and the Sahara Desert. In 2005 he received the RGS's Ness Award for "Leadership of Expeditions. www.neillaughton.com

Noam Leshem Dr Noam Leshem. is a political geographer at Durham University specializing in geographies of ethnic and urban conflict. He has worked and studied violent conflicts in the Middle East for over 15 years, and has particular expertise in the Israeli-Palestinian geopolitical arena. Prior to his academic career, Dr Leshem was involved in the development of peace education programmes and civil society organizations. Dr Leshem is regularly consulted by journalists and policymakers. He is a one of the two lead researchers on the No Man's Land Expedition, and co-recipient of the RGS-IBG Thesiger Oman Award 2015.

Saturday morning lecture http://www.intonomansland.org @NoamLeshem

Speakers Biographies

Caroline Letrange A passionate traveller, Caroline Letrange became fascinated with Nepal's diversity and the haunting beauty of the Himalayas when she first visited Kathmandu 10 years ago. Since then, she has travelled extensively in Nepal, climbed Everest in 2006, Cho Oyu in 2004 and went to the top of Manaslu in 2013. In East-Africa Caroline travelled to Tanzania and Kenya, sharing unique moments on Kilimanjaro and Mt Kenya. As a former Art Director, Caroline is the founder of Eseriani Travel Media, a full-service online marketing agency offering support to companies in the travel sector, adventure brands and athletes. Her professional career is now focused on developing Ambassadorship Programs to deliver one-on-one executive coaching and corporate wellness programs Communicating your discoveries: photography www.eseriani.com @EserianiNews

Ceri Lewis Ceri Lewis is an experienced marine biologist with expertise in how environmental change and pollution affects reproductive processes in marine animals. Ceri currently holds lectureship position at Exeter University, running the two marine biology modules and is conducting research into how marine animals adapt and respond to environmental change, such as ocean acidification, climate change and increasing pollution. As part of this research Ceri joined the Catlin Arctic Survey in 2010 and 2011 to study ocean acidification processes in the High Arctic during the winter-spring transition period, enduring temperatures as low as -40°C in the pursuit of vital scientific data on climate change. She also helps run a tropical marine ecology field trip to study the coral reefs in the Bahamas and recently did a research cruise into marine microplastics off the coast of Maine from a 60ft yacht. Ocean and marine projects https://biosciences.exeter.ac.uk/staff/index.php?web_id=ceri_lewis @CezzaLew

Peter Long Dr Peter Long works as a research fellow in the Department of Zoology, University of Oxford. His research involves developing web-based decision support tools for optimal land use planning in future environmental scenarios taking account of biodiversity conservation goals and ecosystem service provision. This work involves lots of remote sensing, databases, environmental modelling and close working with other disciplines, especially e-science, physical geography and economics. In order to validate global models, expeditions to collect high-quality field data sets are essential. Peter coordinates long-term biodiversity monitoring programmes in Madagascar and Honduras in association with Operation Wallacea and develops land management projects within the voluntary carbon sector for these sites. These projects also permit conservation capacity building, especially in relation to GIS and RS. Biological sciences field research workshop http://www.peterlong.net

Helen Lloyd Helen Lloyd has cycled 45,000km through 45 countries on 4 continents. On her first long ride from the UK to Cape Town, she cycled across the Sahara, Sahel and tropics of West Africa, paddled down the Niger River in a pirogue, hitchhiked to Timbuktu and spent three months traversing the Congo. Her most recent and challenging journey was three months spent cycling across Siberia in winter. This was part of a longer journey in Asia, where she also cycled through Russia, Mongolia and the Silk Road cities of central Asia. She has also cycled through North and Central America, and made remote journeys by river and horse. Desert Snow is her debut book about her Africa ride. Her second book, A Siberian Winter’s Tale, will be published in December 2015. Cycling workshop www.helenstakeon.com @helenlloyd

Speakers Biographies

Cameron Mackay Cameron is a third year undergraduate of Geography at the University of Glasgow. Over the last three years he has joined and organised expeditions to Greenland to study impacts of climate change and Tanzania to study volcanology and environmental interactions. Throughout all of these trips, he has developed a strong interest in documentary filmmaking and has produced two short films outlining environmental issues in the Arctic and in Africa. He is currently working on setting up more opportunities for UK youth expedition projects in producing and communicating their discoveries through film and other medias. Communicating your discoveries: film and video changingplanet.co.uk @CameronJMackay

Mac Mackenney Mac founded Max Adventure, a company with 18 years' experience in providing consultancy, planning and logistical services for expeditions and adventures. Mac is a consultant to Sir Ranulph Fiennes and acted as his right-hand man on his last North Pole expedition. The Max Adventure team have created, planned, led, supported and filmed expeditions around the world, including the Land Rover Global Expedition; Xtreme Everest medical research expedition; the first amphibious crossing of the Bering Strait; 4 long-distance driving records including the prestigious London to Cape Town record and 'Driven to Extremes', a global extreme driving series for Discovery Channel. He has recently returned from leading a 20,000km overland drive to far eastern Siberia in 3 new Vauxhall Vivaro, 2WD vans - another world first. Vehicle expeditions and Route planning www.maxadventure.co.uk @MaxAdvExp

Leon McCarron Leon McCarron is an adventurer and filmmaker. Since attending Explore in 2009, Leon has cycled 14,000 miles from New York to Hong Kong, walked 3000 miles across Mongolia and China and trekked 1000 miles through the Empty Quarter desert. Last year he followed the longest river in Iran from source to sea and crossed Argentine Patagonia on horseback. In December he is headed back to the Middle East to walk through Palestine, Israel, Jordan and Egypt in search of stories of hope and understanding. More information on films, TV show and book at the website below. Communicating your discoveries: Film and video http://www.leonmccarron.com/ @leonmccarron

Sam McConnell Since 1997 Sam has led over one hundred teams in deserts across Africa, from the Namib & Kalahari to the Sinai in the Eastern Sahara. In 2002 he walked solo and unsupported across the Dune Sea of the Namib Desert. In 2007 he traversed the Sinai desert with a group of nine bereaved children. In 2012 he retraced this epic journey across the Sinai desert with 40 underprivileged young people. In 2011 he found himself back in Namibia and the coast of wreck and bones, leading a group of nine people 500km on foot and unsupported up the Skeleton Coast For the last three years Sam has worked for the British Exploring Society as Chief Leader on a series of three expeditions to Namibia. Desert and savannah expeditions www.sam-mcconnell-expeditions.com

Speakers Biographies

Nicholas McWilliam After a geography degree, Nick's first use of Geographic Information Systems was in modelling large mammal distributions in Tanzania, where he has remained involved in mapping, research and training in the country's National Parks. He has worked for the RGS's Expedition Advisory Centre (now GO), the British Antarctic Survey's GIS team, the UN in South Sudan, and Médecins Sans Frontières. Since 2003 he has worked on mapping and GIS for disaster response with the UK humanitarian charity MapAction. This involves continual development and, about once a year, an emergency-response mission, most recently in Nepal following the earthquake there. He co-edited the RGS's GIS Fieldwork Manual and regularly helps with the RGS's fieldwork workshops. After GIS lecturing for Life Sciences and Geography at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, he's now based in Stirling - closer to the hills. Nick's first expedition, studying medicinal plants in Sumatra, started at 'Explore' in 1986. GIS, GPS and field mapping workshop www.mapaction.org

David Measures David leads CARLA International’s Social Development department. He has over 12 years of field experience and has been responsible for designing and implementing international development projects across Asia Pacific, Africa and the Middle East. He has extensive field expertise leading small teams conducting social development analysis, consultative and participatory approaches in the design of sustainable livelihood projects.

Human Sciences field research workshop www.carlainternational.org

Mel & Michelle Inspired by Explore in 2014, Mel and Michelle paddle boarded the length of the River Thames from the source to sea, 206 miles over 11 days, incorporating citizen science, testing the quality of the water, raising awareness about the health of our river and inspiring others to create their own paddle board adventure. In 2016 we will be co-organising the first River Thames source to sea stand up paddle relay for the Totally Thames Festival. We will be championing citizen science, water conservation and adventure.

www.melandmichelle.com

Duncan Milligan Duncan runs Tour de Force, an adventure logistics company, specialising in overland travel. After many years backpacking around SE Asia, he worked for 5 years as a tour leader / driver for a well-respected Overland company. During this time he spent a year in South America, drove from the UK to Cameroon and back, Nairobi to Cape Town, Kathmandu to the UK via China, Tibet and Central Asia- as well as many trips to the Sahara region. Since setting up Tour de Force, Duncan has been a team member on an expedition to take a flying car to Tomboctou, and travelled as support crew on numerous classic car rallies including, Peking to Paris and London to Cape Town. He has also project managed The Africa Rally, The Mototaxi Junket and The Icarus Trophy for The Adventurists. He has led numerous schools expeditions to rural Lesotho and townships in South Africa. He recently joined a team training BBC journalists on hostile environments and travel safety advice. He also advises numerous clients wanting to complete their own overland adventures. Vehicle Dependent expeditions & Route Planning www.tourdeforceuk.com @Tourdeforceuk

Speakers Biographies

James Moore James Moore is a specialist in Travel and Expedition Medicine. As an expedition medic he has worked in locations such as the jungles of Borneo and Papua New Guinea, the deserts of Sudan and Ethiopian mountains, through to remote islands in the Southern Ocean. He has taught expedition medicine to medics and lay people alike, for organisations such as the BBC, Tiger Productions and the Zoological Society of London and the Met Office. He is part of the RGS Medical Cell, an Editor of the Oxford Handbook of Expedition and Wilderness Medicine and co-Director of the International Diploma in Expedition and Wilderness Medicine. Expedition Medicine & Tropical Forest workshop (Saturday) http://www.travelhealthconsultancy.co.uk

Tim Moss Tim Moss has supported over 100 expeditions across all seven continents. He's organised large-scale Arctic and Himalayan expeditions, climbed new mountains in Siberia and recently spent 16 months cycling 13,000 miles around the world with his wife Laura. He runs adventure website The Next Challenge, where he offers free advice and an expedition grant.

www.thenextchallenge.org @NextChallenge

Laura Moss Human geography undergraduate; currently working as a solicitor but looking to get back into geography related work / development work. Laura Moss organises the UK's Cycle Touring Festival, which brings together all those people interested in exploring the world by bicycle. Her own adventures include a 16 month, 13,000 mile bike ride through 27 countries around the world, as well as walking across Patagonia, swimming from Europe to Asia and, closer to home, running the length of every London Underground Tube line. In her normal life, she works as a solicitor for charities and social enterprises and firmly believes in fitting adventure into the everyday. Website: www.cycletouringfestival.co.uk Twitter: @lauralikeswater Cycling workshop www.cycletouringfestival.co.uk @lauralikeswater

Dr Mark Mulligan Mark Mulligan, Reader in Geography at King's College London considers field research as fundamental to understanding and managing environments and ecosystems. He has led successful field teaching and research programmes throughout Europe, Latin America and South-east Asia including RGS-IBG sponsored fieldwork in Colombia, Brunei and Nepal and has supervised more than 15 successful student expeditions at undergraduate, masters and PhD levels. Mark has been Honorary Secretary to the RGS-IBG Council with responsibility for expeditions and fieldwork and is currently senior fellow of the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre. Mark currently leads research projects on: water, food and poverty in the Volta for the CGIAR Water Land and Ecosystems Programme (supported by DfID); desertification in Southern Europe and North Africa (supported by the European Commission); and the ecosystem services provided to humanity by the world's protected areas. Talk: Designing a research project, GIS & Mapping workshop (Sunday) www.policysupport.org @markmulligan

Speakers Biographies

Toby Nowlan Toby Nowlan organised and led several research expeditions including to Borneo's lowland rainforests and to Mexico in search of the world's rarest marine mammal. He has supervised carnivore research in Madagascar, monkey research in West Africa, bird conservation in South Korea, narwhal research in the Canadian Arctic and was zoologist for a further expedition to the Canadian Arctic. Toby was a finalist for the Rolex Young Laureates of the Year Award 2011 for plans to develop a coral reef research centre in Indonesia. He now works as a researcher at the BBC's Natural History Unit on One Planet, the sequel series to Planet Earth. Over the last three years he has filmed across the world including Namibia, Botswana, Peru, Bolivia, and Madagascar. Communicating your discoveries: Film & video http://www.tobynowlan.com/ @tobynowlan

Fearghal O'Nuallain Fearghal has spent the last ten years exploring the world by pedal, foot & paddle. He spent 18 months completing a 31,000km circumnavigation of the globe by bicycle to prove the world is round and two weeks walking across Rwanda to research an MSc thesis in Environment & Development. He also likes roads & spent a month cycling, hitching & hiking the Via Egnatia from Istanbul to Albania. Fearghal is currently working on ALTIPLANO the first in a trilogy of adventure films exploring the Geography of Water & teaching Geography at St Paul's Academy in Abbey Wood. Communicating your discoveries: Film & video fearghalo.com @Re_Ferg

Adrian Parker Professor Adrian Parker is a geographer / archaeologist specialising in desert geomorphology, geoarchaeology and climatic change in the sub-tropics. He is the co-author of Global Environments through the Quaternary (OUP 2007) and has published over 70 articles in learned journals, monographs and book chapters. His field research has largely been spent in the Middle East (UAE, Oman, Saudi Arabia) and occasionally in to North Africa. In his spare time he tinkers with Land Rovers.

Earth Sciences field research workshop http://www.palaeodeserts.com/

John Pattison John Pattison is a PhD student at the Natural Resources Institute (NRI) at the University of Greenwich and Project Manager of an international collaborative research project on food security in India. He has lived and worked in India and East Africa on international development projects focusing on the environment and food security. Over the last several years he has spent time exploring the Canadian Arctic by canoe, Outer Mongolia by horseback, the Rocky Mountains on foot, and Pamir Highway in Central Asia by whatever means available. He volunteers his time on the Board of the Battle River Watershed Alliance and is the Director of the Biodiversity Grants Program for the Alberta Conservation Association in Canada. Human Sciences field research workshop

Speakers Biographies

Emily Penn Emily Penn is an oceans advocate, skipper and artist; a graduate of Cambridge University with a degree in Sustainable Architecture; and Director of global organisation Pangaea Explorations. Prior to 'Sailing the Line' she rounded the planet on the bio-fuelled Earthrace boat; spent 6 months living on a tiny Tongan island organising the largest ever community led rubbish clean-up; and discovered previously unknown oceanic gyres - huge areas of plastic pollution accumulation.

Oceans & Marine projects http://emilypenn.co.uk/

Harriet Pike Harriet was part of her village's bike gang as a child, buy didn't get into cycle touring until inspired by a chance Caspian Sea ferry encounter with a cyclist in 2007. A bike trip across Europe followed and then a few years in the Andes and Himalaya, during which time she fell in love with riding on traffic-free dirt roads. With husband Neil she's updated the Adventure Cycle-Touring Handbook, and written Peru's Cordilleras Blanca & Huayhuash: the Hiking & Biking Guide, both for Trailblazer.

Cycling workshop www.pikesonbikes.com @pikesonbikes

Neil Pike Neil's first trekking experience was with Raleigh International in Patagonia in 2002 and he was soon hooked. He's since hiked in Turkey, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan and India, and across Nepal in winter, but is continually drawn back by the lure of the Andes. His favourite trips have been exploring the Cordilleras Blanca and Huayhuash in Peru, and cycling to and climbing the highest volcanoes in the world on the Puna de Atacama in Argentina. With wife Harriet he's updated the Adventure Cycle-Touring Handbook, and written Peru's Cordilleras Blanca & Huayhuash: the Hiking & Biking Guide, both for Trailblazer. Mountain and trekking workshop www.pikesonbikes.com

Alasdair Pinkerton Dr Alasdair Pinkerton, is a political geographer at Royal Holloway University of London who has worked extensively in South America, South Asia and Cyprus. He has published widely in academic journals and regularly appears in print and broadcast media as a commentator on geopolitical and diplomatic issues. He is a one of the two lead researchers on the No Man's Land Expedition, recipients of the RGS-IBG Thesiger Oman Award 2015.

Into No Man’s Land expedition http://www.intonomansland.org @ AlPinkerton

Speakers Biographies

Sally Povolotsky Sally works for the Special Projects team within Jaguar Land Rover Special Vehicle Operations. As Project Manager she is responsible for the concept and delivery of special projects and vehicles, including the 2015 RGS Bursary Winners' vehicle conversion for the Trail by Fire. Prior to joining Jaguar Land Rover, Sally spent a number of years building expedition vehicles and advising explorers in vehicle outfitting, expedition gear and bush craft mechanical skills. She has also travelled to many far flung places and is now trying to share the passion with her children and planning to take them on a mini adventure to the Scottish Highlands. But the Silk Trail remains a constant daydream. Sally can often be found sitting round a fire pit dreaming up ideas for new vehicle adventures. Vehicle dependent expeditions workshop www.landrover.co.uk/special-vehicle-operations/special-vehicles.html @landrover_uk

Tariq Qureshi Tariq enthusiasm for expeditions began during his school days some 20 years ago. Since then, he has participated in a range of expeditions, primarily mountaineering, in the Arctic. He is currently based at Oxford University where he has regular teaching commitments, both within the medical school and through running a wide range of first aid courses, and is a faculty member for the Acute Life-threatening Events Recognition and Treatment (ALERT) course. Tariq is the Medical Adviser to Oxford University Expeditions Council and is a contributing author to the Oxford Handbook of Expedition and Wilderness Medicine. He has worked with Wilderness Medical Training for over 12 years, was recently appointed Head of Student Liaison for the company, and recently completed the Diploma in Mountain Medicine, administered by Medical Expeditions and the University of Leicester. He is a qualified mountain leader.

Andrew Ranville Andrew received his MFA from the Slade School of Fine Art in 2008. Ranville’s work describes the relationship of the body to space inhabited, interacted with, and navigated. His research and arts practice underlines interests that include environment, cartography, community, and rigorous fieldwork as a medium. His installations, sculptures, architectural interventions, photographs and films explore ideas related to site-specificity as well as the viewer’s interaction with the work. The balance between the formal and functional aspects of the work often elicits those interactions, and are realized using ecologically sensitive methods which emphasize notions of sustainability and resilience. His recent research and projects include a collaboration with the crees Foundation in Manu Biosphere of the Peruvian Amazon; an art and conservation exhibition on Isla del Coco in the Pacific as a TBA21 Academy Fellow; and working as the Rabbit Island Foundations Executive Director and residency administrator on a wilderness island in Lake Superior, Michigan. Communicating your discoveries: Artists in the field www.andrewranville.com / www.rabbitisland.org

Kate Rawles Kate Rawles is passionate about using adventure travel to communicate major environmental issues - and inspire positive action. Her book The Carbon Cycle; Crossing the Great Divide (Two Ravens Press 2012 & Rocky Mountain Press 2013) is based on a 4553 mile bike ride from Texas to Alaska, following the spine of the Rockies and exploring climate change. It was shortlisted for the 2012 Banff Mountain Festival Adventure Travel book awards and a runner up in the People's Book Prize. Kate has worked as a 'mission leader' on Pangaea Exploration's yacht Sea Dragon, exploring values and worldviews and supporting science and activism on ocean plastic pollution. She's now planning another environmental bike ride - this time in South America, focussed on biodiversity. Kate's background is environmental ethics. She runs occasional Outdoor Philosophy sea kayak trips and was a university lecturer for many years before going fully freelance in 2014. Cycling panel www.outdoorphilosophy.com @CarbonCycleKate

Speakers Biographies

Spike Reid Spike is a photographer, adventurer, public speaker and designer. He grew up on the edge of Dartmoor having many adventures up on the hills, with Scouts, Naval Cadets, Ten Tors and climbing. He studied BA Design for Industry at Northumbria University in Newcastle, where he was also an active member of the Officer Training Corps, undertaking adventurous training with them in the Yukon, the Alps, Picos de Europa and East Africa. In 2008, with two friends, Spike won the first-ever Land Rover Go Beyond bursary, and spent seven months circumnavigating the globe along the line of 50° north, He has organised and led an independent climbing and trekking expedition to Afghanistan and Tajikistan. He has been a leader on a British Exploring expedition to Svalbard, Norwegian Arctic, and is now an international mountain leader (UIMLA certified) and works as a Leader for Wild Frontiers and Camps International. His most recent passion is Stand Up Paddle boarding. River journeys and other adventurous projects http://www.spikereid.com @SpikeReid

Ben Saunders Ben Saunders is one of the world’s leading polar explorers, and a recordbreaking long-distance skier who has covered more than 6,000km (3,700 miles) on foot in the Polar Regions since 2001. His accomplishments include leading The Scott expedition, the longest human-powered polar journey in history, and the first completion of the expedition that defeated Captain Scott and Sir Ernest Shackleton, a 105-day round-trip from Ross Island on the coast of Antarctica to the South Pole and back again. Ben is the third person in history to ski solo to the North Pole, and holds the record for the longest solo Arctic journey by a Briton. He is also the founding editor and publisher of Avaunt Magazine and a global brand ambassador for Land Rover. Polar panel http://www.bensaunders.com @BenSaunders

Richard Scrase Richard is a radio and video producer. He regularly pitches ideas and is on the look-out for expedition based stories for radio. Whether you want to record your journey from the back of a horse, underwater, or in a hot-air balloon, he can suggest what equipment to use and more importantly, what to do with your recordings once you get home. Richard is currently Head of Online Communication at Understanding Animal Research where he runs websites, social media and makes videos - and he would like to be invited to join your expedition! Communicating your discoveries: Sound & radio. www.scrase.eu @rscrase

John Shears Dr John Shears is the Course Director of the Cambridge Polar Leaders Programme at the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge. He is a geographer and environmental scientist with over 25 years’ experience working in the polar regions. Before joining the Scott Polar Research Institute in 2015, he worked for the British Antarctic Survey in a variety of senior management roles, including Head of Operations and Engineering. John was also an expert adviser to the UK government in Antarctic Treaty discussions. He has significant knowledge and expertise in polar operations and logistics, field safety and environmental management. Over the past decade, John has worked closely with the RGS-IBG on many education and expedition projects, and is currently the Vice-President for Expeditions and Fieldwork and Co-Chair of the Field Research Programme Steering Committee.. Arctic and Polar panel

Speakers Biographies

Corinne Silva Artist Corinne Silva’s practice is concerned with landscape as a complex interrelation of culture and geography, politics and botany, living beings and inanimate matter. The artist explores these interrelations through a direct and immediate engagement with the territories she visits, on journeys through Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. The effect of human activity on land, geographic and political borders, migration and ecology are among the issues that are investigated in Silva’s works. Silva explores these themes by means of photography and video, often combined in the format of an installation, as well as integrating the elements of performance. Corinne Silva is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Photography and the Archive Research Centre, University of the Arts London. Instagram silva.sajovic Communicating your discoveries: Artists in the field www.corinnesilva.com @Silva_Sajovic

Dr Nathan Smith Dr Nathan Smith is a lecturer and researcher in sport and exercise psychology. Primarily, his research is focused on understanding motivation-related processes and how to promote well-being and psychological health. Related to this interest, Nathan has conducted research with a diverse array of expeditiongoers, including those visiting the Arctic, Antarctic and Greater Ranges in an attempt to better understand how individuals adjust when returning from their respective journeys. Nathan is also the co-founder and director of Psyched for Sport (www.psyched4sport.com), a creative psychology publication that communicates scientific findings via the medium of art.

www.psyched4sport.com @PsychEd4Sport

Catherine Souch Dr Catherine Souch is Head of Research and Higher Education at the RGSIBG. Catherine has a BA (Hons) from University of Cambridge and an MSc and PhD in Geography from The University of British Columbia. Before returning to the UK, she was Associate Dean and Professor of Geography at Indiana University Indianapolis. Catherine's own research focuses on records of environmental change from lake and wetland sediments. In her role at the RGSIBG, she oversees the grants programme along with a range of other activities related to Higher Education and Research. Earth Sciences field research workshop & RGS-IBG Grants advice www.rgs.org/research @RGS_IBGhe

Stephen Spencer Manchester based doctor and founder of the Manchester University Expedition Society and Madagascar Medical Expeditions (MADEX; schistosomiasis research and treatment in rural Madagascar). He has been expedition medical officer on trips through the Bornean, Amazonian, Madagascan and Indonesian rainforest, and searched the Sea of Cortez for the rare Vaquita porpoise. Last year Stephen worked as a dive doctor in Mexico, where he led research into the subaquatic sea cucumber fishing trade.

Oceans & Marine panel https://expeditionmadagascarblog.wordpress.com/

Speakers Biographies

Oliver Steeds Oliver Steeds is an investigative journalist, TV presenter and documentary maker. He's reported for UK's leading international investigative series, 'Unreported World' and 'Dispatches' and his reports and documentaries have featured on ABC News, ABC Nightline, NBC, Channel 4 and Al Jazeera amongst others. Oliver also presented major adventure, historical, currentaffairs series internationally for Discovery Channel. He’s a Director of Digital Explorer (bringing the world to the classroom) and Founder and Mission Director of Nekton (a marine research organisation), and formerly a director of the communications agency, Brunswick.

Communicating your discoveries: Film & video www.nektonfilms.co.uk / www.oliversteeds.com / www.digitalexplorer.com @OliverSteeds

John Sullivan John Sullivan is a former Royal Marines Commando of nine years’ experience. He has operated in some of the world’s most challenging environments Jungle, Desert and Arctic. John’s passion in life is to explore with a sense of purpose. Working alone, this has taken him to some of the remotest corners of the world to research and set up factual programmes for the BBC and the National Geographic Channel. He has also led numerous lifechanging conservation expeditions for young people to Namibia, Belize and Borneo. He currently runs Elite Survival Training which provides courses for people wishing to learn the art of survival in every environment. Tropical Forest workshop http://elitesurvivaltraining.com/ @EliteSurvival

Tim Taylor Tim Taylor is a professional photographer and adventurer. His passion lies in exploring and photographing the remote regions of our planet, combining science, art and adventure. Tim was the official photographer for the 2015 Karakoram Anomaly Project, led by Sergiu Jiduc . Tim has visited over forty countries. His first expedition was as a member of a three-month long diving project gathering scientific data on the Mesoamerican barrier reef and diving the Cenotes of the Yucatan. This was followed by a Himalayan expedition to climb the peaks of Tharpu Chuli (5663m) and Singu Chuli (6501m). He has since climbed throughout the United Kingdom and Europe and spent months working deep inside the Arctic Circle. In 2014 I returned to the Himalaya as the official photographer for an expedition to climb the world’s fifth highest mountain, Makalu (8463m), via the South East Ridge. Karakoram Anomaly project www.timtaylorphotography.com @TimTaylorPhoto

Richard Teeuw Richard Teeuw is a lecturer in applied geomorphology and remote sensing at the University of Portsmouth’s School of Earth and Environmental Sciences. His first expeditionary fieldwork was with Brathay in Iceland and Kenya. Richard's PhD focused on geomorphology and diamond prospecting in Sierra Leone. Since then he has used remote sensing for many projects, mostly in the tropics: water resources in Ghana and Sierra Leone; biodiversity surveys in Guyana; soil erosion assessment in Zambia; mineral exploration in Borneo, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Guinea and Mauritania. His enthusiasm for technology transfer and low-cost remote sensing applications has recently been focused on the disaster risk reduction sector: he now runs a Masters course in Crisis & Disaster Management. GIS, GPS and Field Mapping workshop (Sunday) http://bit.ly/1GFDxLS @Chewwy_Teeuw

Speakers Biographies

Craig Turner Dr Craig Turner is a conservation ecologist, part-time expedition leader, writer and photographer. In addition to undertaking independent expeditions, he more recently co-ordinated several EDGE of Existence expeditions for the Zoological Society of London (ZSL). Whilst at ZSL, he also co-ordinated the Erasmus Darwin Barlow Expedition Grant fund. He now co-runs an environmental consultancy with his partner, from the Highlands of Scotland, splitting his time between projects in the UK and overseas. And when time permits he continues to expand his writing and photography work, with past work featuring in titles such as BBC Wildlife, Asian Geographic and Adventure Travel. Craig is a Fellow of the RGS and the Linnean Society of London. Biological Sciences field research workshop www.wychwoodenvironmental.com @cst_craig

Matt Traver Matt Traver is a filmmaker and creator of content relating to adventure, travel and culture. He has worked on ten independent documentary films as a selfshooting producer/director and editor. His productions have taken him from the deserts of Uzbekistan, steppes of Kazakhstan/Mongolia, the high mountains of Iran and Tajikistan, the Tuvan taiga forest and rivers of Siberia. As of 2015 his work has screened at twenty-five international film festivals and events in the UK, Europe, USA, Australia and to over 45 countries via Wild Spirits TV. He is currently in the pre-production phase of a TV series on Siberia. Communicating your discoveries: Film & video http://www.matthewtraver.com/ @MatthewTraver

Tuur Van Balen Revital Cohen and Tuur Van Balen are a London based artist duo working around broad meanings of material and production. Through objects, installation, film and photography they explore manufacturing processes as cultural, ethical and political practices. They are currently making work in the coltan mines of Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo.

Communicating your discoveries: Artists in the field www.cohenvanbalen.com @rc_tvb

Tim Van Berkel Tim is co-founder and Scientific Director of the Heart of Borneo Project, a charity aiming to conserve Borneo's rainforests and its inhabitants through a multidisciplinary and innovative approach. His main interests are tropical biodiversity research and conservation. Tim has carried out ecological and biodiversity research using a wide range of survey techniques in a variety of environments and continents. This includes biodiversity expeditions in Borneo, Peru and Honduras. Unsurprisingly, his main drive is to conserve the world's dwindling rainforests by providing the knowledge base to do so. He holds an MSc in Conservation & Biodiversity from the University of Exeter and runs the Cornish Seaweed Company. He has recently written the RGS-IGB Camera Trapping Manual. Biological Sciences Workshop www.heartofborneo.org @heart_of_borneo

Speakers Biographies

Sarah-Jane Walsh Sarah-Jane is a coral reef ecologist, expedition leader and more recently, natural history television researcher. In 2014 she completed a PhD with the Coral Reef Research Unit (CRRU) alongside the University of Essex, investigating the physiological reasons as to why some coral species are more tolerant to increases in sea surface temperatures than others. Sarah-Jane‘s research was supported by organisations such as Earthwatch and Operation Wallacea and in return she helped to lead expeditions to her study sites in both the Seychelles and South-East Sulawesi, overseeing conservation volunteer opportunities and university research programmes. More recently Sarah-Jane has worked within the prestigious BBC Natural History Unit in Bristol on series such as Shark and Big Blue Live. Oceans and Marine projects

Andrew Welch Andrew Welch cycled across Europe, Turkey, the Caucasus, Iran and Pakistan to India and Nepal over a 2 year period and biked across Mongolia writing, photographing, blogging and filming about the experience. He founded Georiders in Georgia (georidersmtb.com) providing mountain bike tours and supporting the local biking community. He has written 'Weave of the Ride' (weaveoftheride.com) and 'Between Worlds' (betweenworlds.bike) about his cycle travel experience and 'Prepare, Pack, Pedal' a practical guidebook to going on an adventure bicycle tour and the 'The Wilderness Open Guiding Book'- an open source guidebook for city exploration. He is part of 'Joya - Arte Ecologiá' (a project to enhance the cultural value of semi-arid environments) based at RGS Field Centre Cortijada Los Gazquez in Almeria, Southern Spain (www.losgazquez.com). Andy completed an MA Design Critical Practice (distinction) at Goldsmiths University and blogs at www.andrewwelch.info. Communicating your discoveries www.andrewwelch.info

Nigel Winser Nigel Winser has had a career directing interdisciplinary research and learning programmes in Africa, the Middle East and Asia to support conservation and sustainable development priorities at a local and regional level. He was Deputy Director of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), responsible for developing and managing some 11 major field programmes with governments and the international science community. This included the Oman Wahiba Sands Programme in 1986/87 and the Jordan Badia Research and Development Programme, both with Dr Roderic Dutton as the lead Science Director. In 2005 Nigel joined Earthwatch as its Executive Director, heading its European ‘citizen science’ programmes and later overseeing its international programmes in Africa, India and the Middle east. This included the HSBC Climate Partnership and working with the Oman Government to establish their new National Field Research Centre for Environmental Conservation. http://eu.earthwatch.org/