Welcome to Terra Curiosity—a space where my love for maps, geology, and the natural world combine with the power of […]
Bridging the Divide: Comparing Two Suitability Models for Wildlife Connectivity
In the previous posts of this series, I explored the potential for ecological restoration and reforestation in the Washington Cascades, […]
Bridging the Divide – Building a Simple Suitability Model (edited)
In my previous post, I laid out the broad goal of this project: to assess the feasibility of reforestation and […]
Bridging the Divide: Back on the trail to building a suitability map
When I first started this project, I intended to dive right into a habitat suitability model for wildlife corridors along […]
Breathing Room: A Visual Update to My Carbon Capture Suitability Project
Back when I first created Breathing Room, I was focused on modeling where infrastructure could align with subsurface geology—particularly in […]
Mapping the Flames: Supplemental Visual Charts
Lessons from Esri UC 2025 In one of the more insightful sessions from this year’s Esri User Conference, presenter Flora […]
Mapping for Resilience: Redesigning My Tsunami Map With The End User In Mind
When I first explored the Cascadia Subduction Zone and its tsunami risk for coastal towns like Seaside, Oregon, my goal […]
Lessons from the Esri 2025 User Conference
Earlier this summer, I had the opportunity to attend the 2025 Esri User Conference virtually. While I wasn’t physically in […]
Bridging the Divide: Mapping Wildlife Corridors Across I-90
As climate change and urban development continue to reshape the American landscape, one form of environmental repair is gaining traction: […]
Breathing Room: Final Reflections: Mapping a Carbon Capture Future
When I began this project, my central question was deceptively simple: Where should we build carbon capture systems in the […]
Breathing Room: Moving Beyond False Dichotomy, And Blending Direct and Point Source Carbon Capture
Throughout this project, I explored where carbon capture technologies might be most geographically and geologically feasible in the U.S. — […]
