Dougal Jerram

Dougal Jerram
Born 12 December 1969 (aged 45)
London, England
Alma mater Cardiff University, University of Liverpool
Occupation
  • Director of DougalEARTH ltd.
Known for
  • TV/Media work e.g. Hottest Place on Earth
  • Scientific research/publications
  • Books

Dougal Alexander Jerram (born 12 December 1969) is a British geologist/earth scientist, television and media presenter/contributor, and author.

As an earth sciences expert he has appeared on the BBC, National Geographic, Discovery Channel, History Channel and Channel 4, as well as many media appearances on the news/radio, relating the earth sciences to the general public. Academically Dougal has published over 45 scientific publications and has edited for journals and held posts on various committees e.g. the Volcanic and Magmatic Studies Group of the Geological Society. He was awarded the Murchison Fund by the Geological Society of London in 2006 for his early career contribution to geology.

Early life and career

Born in London, at the end of the '60s, Dougal grew up in the London suburbs (with a brief stint living in Manchester). His love for geology and the Earth was first realised whilst studying at London's Northwood School and he has been working with rocks ever since. He studied geology, and graduated from Cardiff University in 1992 and obtained his doctorate in 1996 at the University of Liverpool with a research theme looking at how rock textures in volcanic and igneous rocks are formed and can be studied.

His professional career started in 1996 with a two-year postdoctoral position at the University of Würzburg, Germany. In 1998 he moved back to the UK to the University of Durham where he spent 13 years as research fellow, lecturer and senior lecturer. In June 2011 he set up DougalEARTH Ltd. where he combines a mixture of consultancy/media/research and teaching.

Television and media career

His first major TV appearance was on a popular science expedition to Ethiopia called 'The Hottest Place on Earth' for the BBC and discovery in 2009, having appeared early that year on Britain From Above[1] with Andrew Marr. Subsequently he has appeared on a number of science related films, usually at or very near live volcanoes. In 2010 he reported extensively about the air travel disruption after the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption on live TV interviews e.g. on the BBC, Sky News[2] Sky News 4 May 2010], ITV, various live radio interviews, news articles e.g. Channel 4 news,[3] BBC,[4] The Guardian.[5] He has also made Live TV appearances as Dr Volcano for The One Show on the BBC[6]

TV and media contributions include:

"In The Hottest Place on Earth a team of scientists and adventurers descended on a low-lying part of Ethiopia to analyse volcanic activity, the landscape and the way of life of the tribe. Dougal Jerram, the geologist, was fantastic, explaining how the rocky landscape was tilted along cracks in the Earth's crust."....the Times, 20 March 2009.[7]

Books

As well as contributing a significant volume of scientific literature (see publications list), Dougal has written 2 earth science books:

Research

His research career covers over 15 years. Motivated by key scientific challenges in both academic and applied geosciences, Dougal has published extensively in the fields of volcanic margins, rock microstructure and textural analysis, 2D-3D modelling of textures and volcanic basins, volcanology and field geology (see publications). His main areas of research involve understanding volcanic margins, innovative textural analysis of rocks, understanding the development of crystal populations in igneous rocks, and the onset and evolution of flood basalt provinces. His research has been supported by a range of funding bodies, including NERC, EU, Royal Society, and Industry, and he has been a guest editor for Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, ELEMENTS (Elements: An International Magazine of Mineralogy, Geochemistry, and Petrology), and Geological Magazine, and convened sessions at many international meetings. In 2006 He was awarded the Murchison Fund of the Geological Society of London, in recognition of his early significant contribution to Earth Sciences. In 2010 he set up the Volcanic Margins Research Consortium at the University of Durham, and is providing knowledge transfer between academia and industry through workshops, training, consultancy and field trips through DougalEARTH Ltd.

Selection of publications

References

External links

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