By Published: Oct. 13, 2022

Cassandra Brooks of environmental studies at 精品SM在线影片 is being honored by the Explorers Club and the Society of Women Geographers


Growing up in Goffstown, New Hampshire, 精品SM在线影片 Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Cassandra Brooks was a case study in ambition butting up against opportunity. She wanted to do big things, but she wasn鈥檛 sure what, or how, or even if she could.

鈥淚 always undercut myself,鈥 she says.

It didn鈥檛 help that, when she attended college to study biology, she didn鈥檛 feel prepared. 鈥淚 really had a hard time in college,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have the study skills.鈥

What she did have, however, was a deep and abiding respect for nature and a keen interest in doing right by it. 鈥淚 grew up near the woods and water,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 always felt very connected to the world around me. I always felt an obligation to do more good than harm on a daily basis.鈥

Eager to remain in the green on nature鈥檚 balance sheet, Brooks had a life-changing realization after college while working on fishing vessels as a fisheries observer.

Cassandra Brooks

At the top of the page:听Cassandra Brooks speaking at the Futures Congress in Santiago, Chile, in 2019. 鈥淚 never dreamed I鈥檇 give such a talk!鈥 Brooks says听(Photo courtesy of Cassandra Brooks).听础产辞惫别:听Brooks at the Antarctic Peninsula听(Photo courtesy of Cassandra Brooks).

鈥淚 was out on the fishing boats with these fishermen and I understood the social, human dimension of fisheries, and the deep problems with fisheries, and the history of the current moment,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat drove me to go back to school for marine science and focus on deep-sea fish.鈥

Since then, Brooks has earned a master鈥檚 degree in marine science, a graduate certificate in science communication and a PhD in environment and resources. She was a core member of the , a global outreach effort to safeguard the Ross Sea, which became the largest marine protected area in the world in 2016, an event Brooks witnessed first-hand. She鈥檚 spoken at conferences around the globe and dined with Chilean president Sebasti谩n Pi帽era. Recently, she won an NSF CAREER grant to study Antarctic toothfish, whose ear bones offer clues to the health of the Southern Ocean.

And that is only a sampling of her accomplishments.

On many occasions, Brooks says, she was told that working in conservation wouldn鈥檛 pay, that she would struggle to earn a living, that she wouldn鈥檛 be rewarded for it.

Now she鈥檚 being rewarded for it.

Two organizations are honoring Brooks for her scientific contributions: the Explorers Club (EC) and the Society of Women Geographers.

Founded in 1904 and incorporated in 1905, the EC has had among its ranks such eminent figures as Mount Everest summiters Tenzing Norgay and Edmund P. Hillary, world-record deep-sea divers Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh and Kon-Tiki voyager Thor Heyerdahl.

By its own admission, the EC was, until fairly recently, a distinctly male institution.

It was another member, beloved scientist and science communicator Carl Sagan, who sought to change that. In a to a 鈥淔ellow Member鈥 of the EC, Sagan asserts, 鈥淚f membership in the Explorers Club is restricted to men, the loss will be ours; we will only be depriving ourselves.鈥

As proof, Sagan cites numerous women who had done groundbreaking scientific research, including astronomer Linda Morabito, paleoanthropologist Mary Leakey, primatologist Jane Goodall, geophysicist Marcia Neugebauer and marine biologist Sylvia Earle.

His letter did the trick. The EC lifted its restriction, allowing women to join, and now Brooks, as a result of being named one of the EC鈥檚 鈥,鈥 is an honorary member for three years.

The Society of Women Geographers is presenting Brooks with the Ronne Award, named for Edith 鈥淛ackie鈥 Ronne, the first American woman to step foot in Antarctica. According to Ronne鈥檚 daughter, Karen Ronne Tupek, the Ronne Award seeks 鈥渢o recognize the people who have done outstanding, notable things to uncover the mysteries of Antarctica.鈥 听

In its announcement of the award, the Society of Women Geographers summarizes Brooks鈥 work thus: 鈥淒r. Brooks鈥 research draws on a diversity of disciplines to make notable contributions to marine conservation, including research of the oceans touching all seven continents.鈥

Evan Bloom, senior fellow of the Polar Institute in Washington, D.C., says that Brooks is 鈥済reatly deserving鈥 of the Ronne Award. 鈥淪he is an outstanding researcher whose work has connected both fisheries science and public policy to promote cutting-edge marine science objectives in the Southern Ocean.鈥澨

I always felt very connected to the world around me. I always felt an obligation to do more good than harm on a daily basis."

For Brooks, the news of these awards came as a surprise. She thought the emails might have been sent in error. But when it turned out they weren鈥檛, her surprise quickly transformed into gratitude. 鈥淚鈥檓 so grateful that I get to do what I do and that I鈥檓 being honored for it.鈥

One way she expresses her gratitude is through her teaching, and her students are grateful in return.

鈥淐assandra is extremely听committed to her students,鈥 says PhD student in environmental studies Vasco Chavez-Molina. 鈥淚 really don't know how she does it. She always finds the time to support each of her students鈥攑ost docs, PhD students and undergrads.鈥

PhD student Zephyr Sylvester says she wouldn鈥檛 have pursued a doctorate were it not for Brooks. 鈥淚 began a master鈥檚 with Cassandra in 2018. After a few months of working with her, I knew we were a great match. For that reason, I couldn't let that relationship go after only two years, so I decided to pursue my PhD under her guidance. She has always been my biggest advocate and supporter.鈥

Undergraduate Jacklyn Florman, who is working closely with Brooks for her honors thesis on Arctic rivers, calls Brooks 鈥渋ncredibly spunky, understanding and inspiring to work with.鈥

鈥淗er enthusiasm for conservation is infectious,鈥 Florman says, 鈥渁nd she provides a welcoming, open space for her many undergraduate and graduate students to develop their skills and knowledge of complex systems through environmental science and policy.鈥

Indeed, no matter whom you ask about Brooks, a theme emerges, one that perhaps Chavez-Molina sums up best: 鈥淪he is an amazing person, advisor and friend.鈥

Reflecting on her career so far, Brooks tends toward incredulity. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so beyond what I ever thought, in rural New Hampshire, I would be doing with my life.鈥 听

Brooks received her Explorers Club 50 award on March 16 and will speak at a on Nov. 16. She will receive her Ronne Award on Oct. 15 at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. 听