Orbis Environmental Consulting

Our Cultural Resource specialists can help you manage the risk of impacting important historic or archaeological places.

Science Alive

 

Orbis recently participated in Science Alive, a great event filled with all sorts of interesting, interactive and fun activities, each designed to get people excited about science.

The day-long gathering occurs each year at the St. Joseph County Public Library in downtown South Bend, Indiana, with activities ranging from elaborate stage presentations, to smaller, hands-on displays and experiences. Most of these are geared toward school-aged kids, but some are also aimed at enthusiasts in areas like robotics, bee-keeping, geology, and other similar fields.

Science Alive usually draws 3,000-4,000 attendees – not too bad for a library. But this year was especially popular, being the 25th anniversary. I haven’t seen any official numbers, but if the crowd in our section was any indication, we easily exceeded that number.

The Indiana University – South Bend Anthropology Club, led by Dr. Josh Wells, graciously invited me to share their table space. Their club set up a display consisting of the the skulls of several of our extinct prehistoric ancestors, along with a few modern apes, and modern humans (very convincing replica skulls, that is).  Science Alive, is of course an all-ages event, and I can’t tell you how many times kids’ eyes lit up each time they caught sight of one of these skulls. They couldn’t wait to run over and pick one up.

Dr. Josh Wells describing replica skulls of prehistoric hominids

The Orbis side of the table included some of the tools we use while out in the field, like our iPad, fieldbook, and compass. But most visitors were interested in the artifacts. Whether they’re holding a 3,000 year-old stone tool, or a piece of a century old plate that would look at home on a dinner table today, people really seemed to enjoy the chance to interact with things they typically only see on display, on television, or online.

The rest of the library was jam packed with exhibits and demonstrations on astronomy, agriculture (want to hold a chicken?), biology (want to touch a snake?), ecology, geology, medicine, meteorology, physics, robotics, and technology.

Science, at times, struggles to connect to daily life. Science often seems like something that happens in a lab somewhere, or in a movie. But the success of Science Alive and similar events comes from the ability to show how science is part of the “real world”.

On just one Saturday in a Midwestern town, someone could control a robot, watch a 3-D printer in action, touch an animal they might otherwise fear, see a rocket, and hold something someone else made thousands of years ago.

Science helps us understand our world, and make better lives for the people who live in it. Many of the people there can remember a key moment from their childhood that sparked an interest in something they still love today. I wonder who might have caught their spark that day. I can’t wait to see what they do.

 

 

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Tessa M. Aby-Kruger

Botanist

Tessa is a geologist, botanist and vegetation ecologist with over 10 years of experience managing and conducting projects, specializing in ecological and floristic inventories, rare plant surveys, and vegetation monitoring. She also performs wetland evaluations and is a guided hike leader.

Jeremy Sheets

Senior Wildlife Biologist, Vice President

Jeremy is a founding member of Orbis and directs its ecological and wildlife surveys, assessment and planning services, and brings over 20 years’ experience conducting various wildlife surveys with a focus on bat ecology and urban wildlife management.


Jeremy has managed wildlife projects for private firms and the public sector including for wind facilities, pipelines, roadways, military bases, and airports. Jeremy is proficient in wildlife management/control techniques, wildlife identification, threatened and endangered species, and surveying and analysis techniques for mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and insects. Jeremy is a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Qualified Airport Wildlife Biologists who develop Wildlife Hazard Assessments (WHA) and Wildlife Hazard Management Plans (WHMP) for airports. Jeremy is qualified to inspect erosion, sediment and stormwater plans, and their implementation. Furthermore, Jeremy is federally permitted to conduct endangered bat surveys in USFWS Regions 3, 4, 5, and 6 and includes acoustic surveys, mist-netting, and radio telemetry.

J Ryan Duddleson​

Senior Archaeologist, Principal

Ryan is a founding member of Orbis and directs its cultural resource management services, and brings over 20 years’ experience helping clients assess and minimize the risk of impacting places with cultural value.


Ryan works with public sector clients including federal, state, and municipal government, as well as private firms in energy, transportation, industrial, and development sectors. He also coordinates with agencies and consulting parties involved with the National Environmental Policy Act, Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, and other related cultural resource laws and regulations. He performs archival research, analysis, and excavation. Ryan also has experience in artifact and archival curation. He has applied innovative techniques to traditional artifact analysis, such as examining organic residues from prehistoric pottery to determine prior contents. Ryan also has experience with human remains in archaeological settings. Ryan meets the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards and Guidelines for Archaeology and Historic Preservation, 48 FR. 44716 and is a Qualified Professional Archaeologist in Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.