Ginny Catania
Ice dynamics and glacier processes
AUSTIN, Texas—
Ginny Catania joined the Institute for Geophysics
as a research associate in September
2005.
She focuses her research on understanding
ice dynamics and glacier processes in
Greenland
and Antarctica
through
remote sensing,
field
work, and
model
observations.
She
hopes her
work will
lead to better
predictions of how ice sheets will change
in the future and how those changes might
impact global sea level.
Catania completed her first field season
on a multi-year project in Greenland in
spring 2006. Her goal is to study the importance
of short-term ice velocity changes due
to increased summer surface melt to the
stability of the ice sheet interior near a site
called Swiss Camp.
She is also studying ice streams in West
Antarctica to try to understand what causes
ice stream variability. In work published in
the summer of 2006, Catania discovered that
parts of Kamb Ice Stream may have shut
down in as little as 10 years, much faster
than glaciologists previously thought possible.
Whillans Ice Stream is now slowing
down and Catania hopes to better predict
the future flow of Whillans based on her
understanding of what happened to Kamb
Ice Stream.
Catania is not only dedicated to research.
She has tried to get more young women
excited about a career in science. “We need all
sorts of perspectives in science, from a broad
range of women,” she said. She was a presenter
for the Expanding Your Horizons science
conference for middle school girls in Austin
in March 2006. At the University of Washington,
Catania mentored young women from
low-income families to encourage them to
enroll in college.
Now, she’s shifting her focus to women
already in graduate school. She believes
women studying science often don’t feel fully
appreciated by their colleagues and suffer from
a lack of female role models. “I think the most
significant thing I can do for women in science
is to be present doing good science,” she said.
Catania received her PhD. in geophysics
from the University of Washington. Before
coming to the Jackson School, she was a
post-doctoral researcher at the University of
California, Santa Cruz.
For more information about the Jackson School contact J.B. Bird at jbird@jsg.utexas.edu,
512-232-9623.