{"id":729,"date":"2014-06-24T21:33:03","date_gmt":"2014-06-25T01:33:03","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/rockheadsciences.com\/?p=729"},"modified":"2016-09-10T07:34:13","modified_gmt":"2016-09-10T11:34:13","slug":"professor-volcanology-dr-david-pyle-day-life-series","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/rockheadsciences.com\/professor-volcanology-dr-david-pyle-day-life-series\/","title":{"rendered":"Professor, Volcanology, Dr. David Pyle @davidmpyle: A Day in the GeoLife Series"},"content":{"rendered":"
Leading an undergraduate field class in Spain. Copyright David Pyle<\/p><\/div>\n
NAME:\u00a0<\/b> David Pyle<\/p>\n
CURRENT TITLE:\u00a0<\/b> Professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Oxford, UK.<\/p>\n
AREA OF EXPERTISE:\u00a0 <\/b>My research is mainly in the area of volcanology, igneous petrology and geochemistry – unravelling the stories of past volcanic eruptions, and trying to work out what makes volcanoes ‘tick’. My current research projects are focussed in Latin America (southern Chile; Ecuador and Colombia); the eastern Caribbean (St Vincent and Montserrat) and Ethiopia.<\/p>\n
YEARS EXPERIENCE:<\/b>\u00a0 about 25 years in research<\/p>\n
EDUCATION: <\/b>B.A. in Geological Sciences, and PhD in Volcanology at the University of Cambridge; postdoctoral research at the California Institute of Technology (CalTech), and then lecturerships in Cambridge, followed by Oxford.<\/p>\n
WEBSITE: <\/b>http:\/\/www.earth.ox.ac.uk\/people\/profiles\/academic\/davidp<\/a><\/p>\n What’s your job like?<\/b><\/p>\n My job varies from day to day, and the perennial challenge is to keep the research going while balancing all of the daily tasks that can end up consuming most of your time. During term time I can spend a lot of time teaching, both in classes and in smaller tutorial groups; out of term time is when I hope to get more research done. I work with a large team of collaborators (students, postdocs, and more established researchers both in Oxford and elsewhere) and there is a continuous flow of activity related to our ongoing or planned research projects to keep up with – whether it is meeting, planning, writing.. and so on.<\/p>\n What’s a typical day like?\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n Depending on the time of the year, this can vary tremendously. We have just come to the end of the year, so I have spent about three weeks from the past month marking extended essays, dissertations and exam scripts. In between, I was giving final tutorials to students who were preparing for their practical exams, and helping to set up projects for a couple of final-year students. A group of us also spent a very exciting week in London, running a public engagement project called London Volcano (https:\/\/londonvolcano.com<\/span><\/a>), during which we recreated the 1902 eruption of the Soufriere of St Vincent. This collaboration has spun out of a major ongoing research project, STREVA (http:\/\/www.streva.ac.uk<\/span><\/a>), which aims to reduce the negative impacts of volcanic activity on people and communities who live around volcanoes.<\/p>\n