Scientist Profile: Dr. Beth McGee

For Dr. Beth McGee, a Senior Water Quality Scientist at the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, science is all about passion and the outdoors. Dr. McGee has always loved running through streams, catching fish and tadpoles, and hiking in the woods, so her job as a scientist is an extension of that. She is captivated by figuring out how things in nature “work.” She says, “Whether it is how animals adapt to their environment or how temperature affects ecosystem processes. I find it all fascinating.”

Into the Dead Zone

Scientist Profile: Kevin Lutz

Kevin Lutz is an Agriculture Conservation Technician and Assistant Agriculture Program Manager with the Lancaster County Conservation District. This scientist works with farmers to protect their land and the associated local waterways. He can be found doing everything from checking the construction of a manure storage facility on a dairy farm to walking fields and developing a conservation plan on a hog farm to comparing water quality reading in local streams. Sometimes he can even be found selling trees at the Conservation District’s annual tree sale! The variety in his job keeps it exciting, while the end result keeps it rewarding.

Into the Dead Zone

Scientist Profile: Sally Hurlbert

Looking out on the Big Meadow in Shenandoah National Park, it’s not hard to understand what drew Sally Hurlbert to her job here and also what has kept her here for a number of years. Sally is a Park Ranger in Shenandoah National Park, a job that allows her to combine her deep love of the natural world with a talent for sharing her knowledge with others. Her work as an outdoor educator allows Sally to teach people about the natural resources of the park. This allows her to explore many different disciplines of science like wildlife biology, botany, aquatic biology and chemistry, and geology.

Into the Dead Zone

Scientist Profile: Mike Bolinder

Into the Dead Zone

Urbanized Water Cycle Lesson Plan

Into the Dead Zone

What Happens When We Burn Fossil Fuels? Worksheet

Into the Dead Zone

Begin the Journey EarthEcho Expeditions Google+Hangout

Into the Dead Zone

What Happens When We Flush? Virtual Field Trip

Into the Dead Zone

How to Measure Carbon Dioxide

Into the Dead Zone

Into the Dead Zone: What Happens When We Use Fossil Fuels?

Nearly a third of the nutrients that contribute to the Chesapeake Bay Dead zone come from airborne sources. Beginning at a headwaters stream in Shenandoah National Park, Philippe Cousteau Jr. and the EarthEcho Expeditions team investigate how reactive nitrogen in the air makes its way to the Chesapeake Bay.

Into the Dead Zone