#37: Searching for water in Kakuma
Seismic Soundoff20 Juni 2018

#37: Searching for water in Kakuma

In this episode, we highlight a team of Canadian geophysicists that traveled to the second largest refugee camp in the world to find water. The Kakuma Camp in Kenya is home to 185,000 refugees and growing. This is the story of passionate geophysicists working with driven refugees and locals to bring water to 140,000 people in East Africa. In this episode of Seismic Soundoff, what happened when geophysics went to Kakuma. For show notes, including a full transcript, photos and links to dig deeper into the Kakuma water project and Paul Bauman’s work, visit https://seg.org/podcast/Post/6368. Every June 20 marks World Refugee Day, #WithRefugees. To learn more, visit http://www.unhcr.org. Interactive transcript at https://goo.gl/nnbCmv. Geoscientists Without Borders® 2018 marks the ten-year anniversary of the SEG Foundation’s Geoscientists Without Borders® program. The program uses the specialized knowledge and technical skills of geoscientists to mitigate natural hazards by connecting universities and industries with local communities. As a special consideration to our listeners, the SEG encourages you to become a partner in this life changing program by making a donation through the SEG Foundation. The SEG Foundation currently has GWB Matching Funds available. Double your impact today by making a donation today at https://donate.seg.org. Sponsor Schlumberger strives to be a unifying force for social and environmental stewardship, and engages in philanthropic activities that reflect the company’s values. As the founding sponsor of Geoscientists Without Borders®, Schlumberger believes in the science of geophysics to effect positive changes in communities facing environmental hardship and natural hazards. Credits If you enjoy the show, please leave us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts – your reviews bring a smile to our faces. Subscribe to Seismic Soundoff on the podcast app of your choice to receive the latest episodes first. Interviews: Paul Bauman, Landon Woods, Erin Ernst, Doug MacLean, Franklin Koch, Brendan O’Brien, Alastair McClymont Music in the episode courtesy of Epidemic Sound. Additional sound was provided by Brendan O’Brien. This episode was hosted, edited, and produced by Andrew Geary. Thank you to the SEG podcast team - Jennifer Crockett, Beth Donica, Ally McGinnis, Mick Swiney, and Adrienne White, as well as SEG staff Katie Burk and Linda Ford.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(307)

Why SEG Is Building a Home for Mining Geophysics

Why SEG Is Building a Home for Mining Geophysics

"That’s what we’re trying to achieve with this forum: bringing all the people together with different backgrounds and create this community, which I don’t think fully exists right now.” Jiajia Sun an...

18 Juni 30min

The Human Side of Volcano Monitoring

The Human Side of Volcano Monitoring

"I feel like we are making a change in the way that people now see the volcanoes and see the earthquakes in El Salvador. So in that sense, I think we are making a a big change.” Adonay Martinez Coto ...

11 Juni 33min

How Geophysics Connects Curiosity, Science, and Career Opportunity

How Geophysics Connects Curiosity, Science, and Career Opportunity

“If you're curious about geophysics, there's definitely a place in geophysics for you. The field is so interdisciplinary.” Johanna Villagomez joins Andrew Geary to share how curiosity, fieldwork, stu...

4 Juni 23min

What Geophysicists Gain by Attending URTeC

What Geophysicists Gain by Attending URTeC

"Integration, literally, that's why the URTeC is successful.” Marianne Rauch joins Andrew Geary to explain why URTeC 2026 matters for geophysicists who want their work to shape real field decisions. ...

21 Maj 25min

Why Geophysicists Are Paying More Attention to Groundwater

Why Geophysicists Are Paying More Attention to Groundwater

“The concept of mapping the aquifer from the sky, that’s gigantic. It could change how aquifers are managed around the world.” Seogi Kang and Mike Wilt explain why groundwater is becoming one of the ...

14 Maj 28min

The Hidden Opportunity in Critical Minerals That Geophysicists Can’t Ignore

The Hidden Opportunity in Critical Minerals That Geophysicists Can’t Ignore

“We all realize that we need a lot more mineral resources in the next two decades. And we realized that geophysics can play a critical role.” Sarah Devriese and Jiajia Sun explain why demand for crit...

7 Maj 26min

OTC 2026 Emerging Leaders on the Future of Offshore Energy Collaboration

OTC 2026 Emerging Leaders on the Future of Offshore Energy Collaboration

“Nothing can happen in a vacuum anymore. We need to have the developers talking to the geoscientists, talking to the environmental professionals.” Two OTC 2026 Emerging Leaders share why the future o...

23 Apr 28min

Why Seismic Acquisition Is Making a Quiet Comeback

Why Seismic Acquisition Is Making a Quiet Comeback

"What has happened in the last few years is exploration overall has taken a little bit of a backseat. So they are starting to relook at seismic acquisition to explore new areas and solve more complex ...

16 Apr 27min

Populärt inom Vetenskap

p3-dystopia
dumma-manniskor
allt-du-velat-veta
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
medicinvetarna
svd-nyhetsartiklar
rss-kriminologerna
sexet
bildningspodden
dumforklarat
rss-ufobortom-rimligt-tvivel
rss-spraket
det-morka-psyket
paranormalt-med-caroline-giertz
rss-vetenskapsradion-2
vetenskapsradion
halsorevolutionen
rss-vetenskapsradion
pojkmottagningen
rss-broccolipodden-en-podcast-som-inte-handlar-om-broccoli