Contact: Allison Matthews
STARKVILLE, Miss.āA longtime National Geographic magazine editor shared stunning visual depictions of water around the world to emphasize the global challenges associated with the coveted resource.
Among the keynote speakers during the two-day SEC Academic Conference hosted by Ļć½¶Ö±²„ Monday and Tuesday [March 27-28], Dennis Dimick, former executive environment editor at National Geographic magazine, took participants on a āvisual tour,ā beginning with his childhood farm life in the Pacific Northwest.
āThe farm is gone now, and so are [my parents] but it is the platform in which I gained so much interest in these issues,ā Dimick said. The conference is focusing on āThe Future of Water: Regional Collaboration on Shared Climate, Coastlines, and Watersheds.ā
During his career, he has guided creation of several major National Geographic magazine projects, including an April 2010 issue on global freshwater. Additionally, he led a 2011 series called ā7 Billionā on the growing global population and the 2014 āFuture of Foodā series on global food security. In 2004, he orchestrated a 74-page project on climate change called āGlobal Warning: Bulletins from a Warmer World.ā
From women in Kenya who walk miles every day to get water for daily living needs to water powering the modern world, Dimickās photographs included a wide variety of water visuals to stimulate conference discussion regarding solutions. Representatives from all 14 SEC universities are participating at the event focused on collaborative research.
āThese are the kinds of trends that are driving your discussions today,ā he said, also asking, āHow are we going to manage the resource against demand?ā
Dimick said that in 1951 when he was born, global population was 2.5 billion. Projections estimate 9.7 billion by 2050. With increased demand for water come increased challenges, but population isnāt the only concern, he said.
āItās not just quantity of waterāwhether there is waterāitās also quality of water,ā he said, explaining that ābad water is the root of many human diseases.ā
Dimick also said environmental changes like temperature rise will affect the water cycle. He cited more moisture in the atmosphere, increases in extreme rainfall, increased frequency of heat waves, more fires in the West, longer fire season, more floods and decreased snowpacks.
āThere are multiple independent lines of evidence telling us somethingās afoot here,ā Dimick said.
āThis brings us all back to the question of food security,ā he added. He said agricultural research is needed to adapt to changing conditions and increased needs.
Dimick shared trends of land development and talked about balancing human habitation with the natural world. He said endangered species are a particular concern in the Southeastern U.S.
Among his accomplishments, Dimick co-organized the Aspen Environment Forum from 2008-2012, and he regularly presents lectures on global environment issues. He holds degrees in agriculture and agricultural journalism from Oregon State University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. For 17 years, he has been a faculty member of the Missouri Photo Workshop and in 2013 received the Sprague Memorial Award from the National Press Photographers Association for outstanding service to photojournalism.
The SEC Academic Conference represents an expanded slate of academic programming currently supported by the Southeastern Conference. The on-campus event showcases SEC university research in areas of critical importance within the region and around the nation. SECU is the academic initiative of the SEC, and it serves as the primary mechanism through which the collaborative academic endeavors and achievements of SEC universities are supported and advanced.
For more on SECU, visit .