Outsiders: Personal Stories of Marginalization and Perseverance in the Geosciences
CONTAINS OPEN ACCESS

Geological sciences are perhaps the least diverse of all the sciences. Recently, gender equity has approached parity within the student population, but professionally, people of color and differently abled people are still underrepresented in the geosciences. This book presents the autobiographies of eight professional earth scientists from underrepresented groups. They relate the joys and horrors; the help and the harm; and the care, hatred, and indifference they saw in their quests for earth science careers. All became successful, most often despite their circumstances, finding the courage to resist and even fight through the prejudice, bias, ignorance, and indifference that still characterize our society and our profession today. Their stories are unique, yet the reader will see many common threads that describe how these individuals persevered in their dreams to become professional earth scientists.
One Adventure after Another: Turning Challenges into Opportunities Available to Purchase
-
Published:September 14, 2024
- OpenGeoSci
-
Tools
- View This Citation
- Add to Citation Manager for
CitationFrederic H. Wilson*, 2024. "One Adventure after Another: Turning Challenges into Opportunities", Outsiders: Personal Stories of Marginalization and Perseverance in the Geosciences, Claudia I. Mora, A. Wesley Ward
Download citation file:
ABSTRACT
Born in Chicago, Illinois, I am a beneficiary of doors being opened during the 1960s. I was able to attend the University of Chicago Laboratory High School, and after high school, I attended Michigan Technological University. Thinking I’d like to become an architect, I enrolled in the civil engineering program. During orientation week, I discovered the geology department, and as my first class as a civil engineering major was Principles of Geology, it wasn’t long before the hook was set! However, I never really considered a career as a geologist after college because I assumed the draft and the Vietnam War would determine my ultimate fate. But I wasn’t drafted, and, ultimately, I took a job with Shell Oil Company in New Orleans as an “engineer,” though I had a geology degree. Realizing this was not the job I wanted or the place I wanted to be, I sought an adventure by going to the University of Alaska to get a master’s degree. This led to many more adventures and challenges as I learned to adapt to a new environment far different from my past experience. As I finished the master’s degree, I was invited to join the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and began a long career with the Alaska group of the USGS. It, too, has been one continuing adventure, working with and learning from some amazing people through the years. I only hope that others can find their way to their own adventures in the geosciences. There have been barriers thrown up along the way at times, sometimes reflecting that I’m African American. Yet, in all cases, I’ve found ways to adapt or overcome. My style has been to get along, but sometimes I’ve needed to push through barriers to accomplish my goal at the time.