URI Professor August Wins Service Award for Work With Environment

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URI Professor August Wins Service Award for Work With Environment

Peter August
University of Rhode Island professor Dr. Peter August was presented with the Peter Thacher Award at the annual meeting of the Northeast Arc Users Group.

The award recognizes a member of the Northeast Arc Users for demonstrating commitment and excellence in using GIS technology to achieve success in the natural resources management at the “local” level.

“Peter August has achieved great success and effectiveness in applying GIS technology to natural resources management and conservation at the local level. Everything about Peter reflects the mantra ‘Think Global, Act Local,’ also personified by Peter Thacher, as you look over his educational, professional, and personal pathways in life and how he brought them to bear here in Rhode Island and elsewhere,” said Chuck LaBash, director of the URI Environmental Center. 

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August was presented the award on November 7 in Newport.

About August

Dr. August was hired on as an assistant professor in the Biology department at URI in 1981. He moved over to the Department of Natural Resources Science in the mid-1980s.  That is when Dr. August took the lead in widely promoting GIS use by reaching out to other agencies also in their infancy of exploring the use and application of GIS technologies in the Northeast.  These groups formed the foundation of the NEARC User Group. At URI, he established the Environmental Data Center GIS lab (now in its 33rd year), and developed a small army of dedicated graduate and undergraduate students that trace-digitized linear features from U.S. Geological Service topographic maps that served as the initial framework of the RIGIS database.  

In 2000, he was appointed to be the first director of the URI Coastal Institute, where he promoted stakeholder engagement for the sustainable use and management of coastal ecosystems and advocated for the use and application of geospatial data and technology to facilitate those efforts. 

Dr. August was also very active in the U.S. Chapter of the International Association of Landscape Ecology, (a group that focuses on landscape spatial patterns and processes) where he served as councilor-at-large in the 1990s, and served as the group’s president in the mid-2000s.  

He has also served on the Advisory Council of the Rhode Island Conservation Stewardship Collaborative, where he helped to initiate projects for RI land, trusts to assist in identifying important ecological communities and develop management plans for their protected properties.


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