Dr. Sarah Cooley is an Assistant Professor of Planetary Health in the Division of Earth and Climate Sciences at the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke. As PI of the Cryo-hydrO Observation Leaders (COOL) Lab at Duke, her research group investigates how climate change is affecting dynamic cryospheric and hydrologic processes in the Arctic and globally. Her research primarily uses satellite data to map and quantify fine-scale hydrologic change, but she has also conducted field multiple field campaigns in Alaska, Northern Canada, and Greenland. Her primary research focus areas include Northern surface water dynamics, Arctic coastal environmental change and its impact on communities, and global variability in surface water storage. She is also especially interested in how new technologies and big data approaches can revolutionize our ability to observe surface water from space, and she has worked extensively with both new NASA satellites (e.g. ICESat-2, SWOT) and startup commercial earth observation companies (e.g. Planet, ICEYE).
Sarah received her PhD in Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences at Brown University in 2020. She has an MPhil in Polar Studies from the University of Cambridge where she was a Gates Cambridge Scholar and a BS in Geophysics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she was a Morehead-Cain Scholar. Prior to starting at Duke, she was part of the inaugural cohort of Stanford Science Fellows at Stanford from 2020-2021 and an Assistant Professor of Geography at the University of Oregon from 2021-2024. Sarah is especially passionate about all things Arctic, new satellite technologies, and making academia a more accessible, inclusive and healthy place for all.
School Division
Earth & Climate SciencesEducation
- Ph.D., Brown University (2020)
- M.Phil., University of Cambridge (United Kingdom) (2016)
- B.S., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (2015)
Websites
Recent Publications
- Environmental Research Letters 19, no. 2 ( ):
- Journal of Glaciology ( ):
- Nature 618, no. 7967 ( ): E36
- Science (New York, N.Y.) 380, no. 6646 ( ): 693
- Geophysical Research Letters 50, no. 7 ( ):