About Me

Based in Dartmouth, NS

I entered college in 2011 at Texas A&M University at College Station as a Terry Scholar. My undergraduate research focused on paleo-oceanography, specifically the geo-chemical signatures of calcium saturation around the Caribbean during the middle-late Miocene as a result of the rise of the Isthmus of Panama.

After graduating TAMU in 2015 I went on to work for TAMU's Department of Oceanography in a research assistant role out of the physical oceanography lab. My mentor, Dr. Steve DiMarco, shepherded into a role at the Geochemical & Environmental Research Group, based out of TAMU, which is where I found myself working with autonomous and ship board systems.

In 2018 I took a Senior Ocean Glider Technician position with Dalhousie University and their Coastal Environment Ocean Technology & Research (CEOTR) group. I help manage and maintain a fleet of 4 Liquid Robotics Wave Gliders and 10 Teledyne Webb Slocum Buoyancy Gliders along with a wide array of smaller ROVs, sensors, 3D printers, and all the infrastructure needed to maintain constant operations. My position puts me in contact with government, academic, military, and commercial interests; working with the some of the most cutting edge equipment in marine research and autonomous applications.

I am a dual citizen of the US and UK. My full resume can be found here.