Brandy is a geoarchaeologist with King County Parks and Recreation in Renton, WA. She obtained degrees in Anthropology and Geology at SUNY Geneseo, followed by an M.A. in Geoarchaeology at Boston University. Ten years ago, Brandy moved to the Pacific Northwest to work in the field of Cultural Resources Management for a private firm in Seattle. She is extremely active in a number of Geology and Archeology groups in Puget Sound. In Jan 2018, Brandy lectured on “Geo-Archeology in Washington—Hidden landforms and buried history.” (Updated Oct. 2021)
Day: September 29, 2021
Brown, Ned
Born and raised in Excelsior, Minnesota, Ned attended Dartmouth College (A.B., 1960), the University of Otago, New Zealand (M.Sc., 1961-62 supported by a Fulbright scholarship), and the University of California, Berkeley (Ph.D., 1963-66) with his field area in New Zealand
He was employed as a Geology Professor at Western Washington University from1966-1999 and subsequently was appointed as an Emeritus Professor. Over these years he supervised ~30 M.S. student theses, nearly all in the local region. His geology research interests include metamorphism, structure, plutonism, plate tectonics, while working extensively in the San Juan Islands, North Cascades, and Coast Mountains of southern B.C.
In May 2017, Ned lectured on the “Geology of the San Juan Islands, WA.” (Updated Oct. 2021)
Irving, Tony
Tony Irving, UW professor and world expert on meteorites, holds one of his meteorite samples that has been dated at 4.6 billion years. He is an international expert in meteorites, having identified more than 1500 samples from Northwest Africa, Oman, China and the USA and published over 90 articles in international journals and books. He received his B.Sc. and Ph.D degrees in Australia. In April 2017, Tony lectured to the QGS on Meteorites—Ancient rocks from Space. (Updated Oct. 2021)