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APSU Professor Receives NSF Grant to help Train Dendrochronologists

        CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. 鈥 Not a lot of options exist for college students wanting to study dendrochronology 鈥 the examination of tree rings to determine environmental variables such as droughts or fires that occurred centuries ago. Austin Peay State University has a Biogeography, Environment and Tree-ring Laboratory (BETR Lab) to conduct this type of research, but it鈥檚 in the minority compared to the rest of the nation.

        CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. 鈥 Not a lot of options exist for college students wanting to study dendrochronology 鈥 the examination of tree rings to determine environmental variables such as droughts or fires that occurred centuries ago. Austin Peay State University has a Biogeography, Environment and Tree-ring Laboratory (BETR Lab) to conduct this type of research, but it鈥檚 in the minority compared to the rest of the nation.

            鈥淢ost universities in this country don鈥檛 have a tree-ring lab,鈥 Dr. Christopher Gentry, BETR lab director and assistant professor of geography at APSU, said.

            It鈥檚 an unfortunate reality given the field鈥檚 importance in understanding the history and natural growth patterns of our country鈥檚 forests. But there鈥檚 hope for the students eager to learn. Every summer, Gentry and his colleagues from Indiana State University, the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and the Rocky Mountain Tree-Ring Research hold an intensive nine-day field research course known as the North American Dendroecological Fieldweek.

            鈥淲e have about 50 participants from pretty much all walks of professional and academic life,鈥 Gentry said. 鈥淔or the most part, they鈥檙e a mix of students and faculty members from around the nation, and we split up into five or six research project groups, led by the top dendrochronolgists in the nation.鈥

            For students attending universities without dendrochronology labs, the field week may be the only time they get to conduct this type of research. The program provides an important service to furthering this field of research, training some 1,000 dendrochronologists over the years, and a new $275,000 National Science Foundation Grant, awarded to Gentry and his colleagues, will ensure that the fieldweek continues through 2015.

            鈥淚t鈥檒l provide money to maintain the scholarships, to help with the logistical cost of things, but also to provide some of the technology and some of the field equipment to keep this process going for five years,鈥 Gentry said.

            This year鈥檚 fieldweek will take place at the Mountain Lake Biological Station in Pembroke, Va., where participants will conduct research on topics such as the fire history, wood anatomy, dendroarchaeology and dendroclimatology.

            鈥淲e are giving the ability for schools that don鈥檛 have labs or don鈥檛 have a class, to have their students trained,鈥 Gentry said. 鈥淎nd they鈥檙e not all coming from geography or geosciences departments. We have biology students, forestry students, and geology students that come to learn this information.鈥

      For more information on the fieldweek or APSU鈥檚 BETR Lab, contact Gentry at gentryc@apsu.edu or visit www.apsu.edu/betrlab.

- Charles Booth, staff writer