Our interdisciplinary Adjunct Faculty are professionals who volunteer to advise and mentor teams and individual students in the simulation. Each Adjunct Faculty member typically holds on-line office hours in the simulation 2hr weekly during the Spring Semester. Additionally these faculty members participate in rotation in the annual "Tweak The Scenario" symposium at the CONTACT Conference .
Bahama, aka John Bregenzer, earned his Ph.D. in anthropology with a study of cultural change in the out-island Bahamas: "Tryin' to Make It: Adapting to the Bahamas." University Press of America, 1976. In 1978 he began research into how computerized communication is changing world culture. He chaired a session on this topic at the meetings of the American Anthropological Association in San Francisco in 1990. In this he was able to draw on years of collaboration in the SolSys Simulation. For two years Bahama ran his own SolSys colony: Northwest Passage, a plausible future environment under earth's north polar icepack, not entirely dissimilar to the environment of the early Bahamas in it's desolation, but with vastly changed technology.
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... is an award winning artist who divides his time between painting, sculpturing, and computer graphics. He teaches computer graphics at Modesto Junior College and CSU-Stanislaus. In the 1980's Hagan organized projects exploring the nature of the creative proccess in which scientists, artists and writers collaborated on exercises in disciplined imagination. He has carried on with this concept as cofounder of the annual CONTACT conferences. An active advocate of international space efforts, Hagan is founder and board member of the International Association of Astronomical Artists.
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is former Secretary-General of the World Futures Studies Federation, an international professional non-governmental organization that has "consultative status" with UNESCO; a part-time futures consultant for neoFutures; author of a new science-fiction thriller; a former professor of Futures Studies at the University of Houston-Clear Lake; and, currently a federal grant coordinator at the University of Hawai`i. Jones served as Faculty Leader for the Luna Settlement in SolSys 1994-1999 and has been a regular at CONTACT conferences. He was a founding member of the Honolulu L-5 society, wrote his MA thesis on space development, and dreams of retiring to a micro-gravity orbital habitat. In the meantime, he can be found in his LEO Station office, in the persona of "Owlz."
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... is an astronautical engineer and author with degrees in physics and systems management, has published fiction as "G. David Nordley," technical papers and nonfiction articles, including "Don't Rule Out Intersteller Probes". He works at his home in Sunnyvale, CA, consulting, writing and investing. His stories appear in Analog and Asimov's magazines, and elsewhere.
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I'm a freelance science writer specializing in astronautics, Earth and planetary sciences, and environmental history. I earned a Master's degree in History in 1987, performed in planetariums, then worked at NASA's Johnson Space Center as Senior Technical Writer and historian. I became a full-time freelance writer in 1995. NASA has published several of my histories, including Humans to Mars: Fifty Years of Mission Planning (2001), Walking to Olympus: An EVA Chronology (1997), and Mir Hardware Heritage (1995). Currently I'm writing a history of Mars Sample Return planning for Springer Praxis. Since 1996, I've compiled Romance to Reality, an online guide to moon and Mars exploration planning. I'm also an educator in the Lowell Observatory Navajo-Hopi Outreach Project and a member of the Mars Institute faculty. I live on a cinder field in Flagstaff, Arizona with spouse Martha, child Samantha, and cat Deimos. |
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From December 2001, I have joined my colleagues
at the Finland Futures Research Centre at the Turku School of Economics
and Business Administration for a six-month stay as a Fulbright Lecturer
and Researcher.
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. . . is Research Scientist with the Center for Mars Exploration and
the Computational Sciences Division of NASA Ames. Michael received a
BS in Physics and a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Mathematics from Rutgers
University and has been at NASA Ames Research Center since 1987. His
research includes robotics, machine learning, visualization, and tools
for enhancing and easing scientific modeling. He was one of the founding
members of the artificial intelligence and the intelligent mechanisms
groups at Ames.
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... is an anthropologist with over 30 years of teaching experience at a number of universities and community colleges. He is currently at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California. His research interests have included biological anthropology, demographic and genealogical anthropology, Native American Ethnohistory, cultural futures, and metalaw. He has taught a course in Anthropology Through Science-Fiction several times and his library includes over 40 years of Analog magazine. Bob is a veteran of First CONTACT, and currently serves as CONTACT Secretary.
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Elizabeth Viau is Emeritus Professor in the Charter School of Education at California State University, Los Angles, where she taught classes in the use of technology in education and continues to teach World Builders, . Elizabeth has attended a number of CONTACT Conferences, AstroBiology Conferences in Washington State and at NASA Ames, and a Lunar and Planetary Society Workshop on Martian Analogs. She also participated in workshops on the Burgess Shale and at the Royal Tyrell Museum in Alberta, Canada.
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& nbsp;. . . has been building and managing large IP networks since 1988. She was most recently a member of the technical staff at Packet Design, where she was responsible for operational aspects of their Internet scaling projects. Cathy was previously at the @Home Network where she was responsible for routing and IP addressing on the @Home Network. Cathy became involved with SolSys on one of her post graduation visits to Northern Arizona University. She provided Internet connectivity and computers to three CONTACT conferences, allowing the students who were remote to interact directly with the students able to attend the meeting. Currently she is focusing on her photography, digital imaging, and her second cross country bicycle trip. |
Reed D. Riner, Professor,
Department of Anthropology
email: Reed.Riner@NAU.edu
last updated 06.01.30