URI graduate student
awarded humanities grant for climate change study
Alanna Casey is bringing a unique
perspective to the study of climate change at national parks in the United
States.
A
graduate student in the University of Rhode Island’s Department of Marine
Affairs who already earned a master’s degree in history from URI, she is
analyzing three parks from the perspective of science, policy and history to
help them prepare for the inevitable challenges they will face as sea level
rises due to the warming climate.
“I’m taking a dual approach,” said
Casey, a native of San Ramon, Cal., with an undergraduate degree from Smith
College. “I’m conducting historical research, archival work and oral histories
to get historical perspectives on how the parks may have adapted to changes in
the past, and I’m also interviewing site managers about how this information
can be interpreted in the present.”
“I chose those sites because they have
already been documented as having high climate change vulnerability risk, they
have cultural resources to protect, they have different coastal morphologies,
and they are all in different places in their vulnerability assessment
process,” Casey said.
Gulf Islands, for instance, combines
colonial history with military history and has already completed a climate
change vulnerability assessment.
San Francisco Maritime protects unique ships
along the Hyde Street Pier and has an unusually high vulnerability risk for a
West Coast site. Colonial also has a high risk and is in the middle of its
vulnerability assessment, which is being managed by URI’s Coastal Resources
Center.
Casey has already completed her research
visit to San Francisco, where she made her own environmental observations about
the site, spoke with site managers, and studied its archives.
“I was surprised by the changes they are
already observing in species ranges,” she said. “They already noticed more
biodeteriogens in the wooden ships, especially wood-boring worms. And there are
a lot more sea lions than in previous years.”
These results make her excited for her
visit this month to Pensacola.
“I haven’t made it through all the
archival documents from San Francisco yet,” she said. “I think that’s where
I’ll find the most surprises.”