糖心Vlog

Interview with Tamsin Mather

The volcanologist discusses the joys of fieldwork, the fight for equality, and how her son鈥檚 battle with leukaemia transformed her outlook on life

Published on
June 13, 2019
Last updated
June 13, 2019

Tamsin Mather, professor of earth sciences at the University of Oxford, researches the science behind volcanoes and volcanic behaviour. In 2018, she won the Rosalind Franklin Award, given annually by the Royal Society to a woman for outstanding work in any field of science, technology, engineering or mathematics. She is also a winner of the Philip Leverhulme Prize and the L'Or茅al-Unesco For Women in Science Award.

Where and when were you born?
Bristol, 15 December 1976 鈥 a Wednesday.

How has this shaped you?
According to the nursery rhyme, I聽should apparently be 鈥渇ull of woe鈥, and I聽am 鈥 but only sometimes. I聽also moan every year that Christmas overshadows my birthday and am reminded every year that I聽am lucky I聽was born 10聽days early! Bristol has a strong independent identity and plenty of hills and wonderful nearby countryside. It was a great place to grow up, although I聽don鈥檛 miss the drizzle.

What kind of undergraduate were you?
Not as diligent as I聽wish I聽had been or as I聽tell my students to be. I聽worked extremely hard at school, and when I聽got to university, I聽wanted to experience many things alongside the academic work. I聽spent a lot of time socialising, trying new sports and clubs. I聽did knuckle down in my third and fourth years and loved my final-year research project.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

How did you get into your research area?
Largely by accident. After my chemistry undergraduate degree at the University of Cambridge and some time out of science, I聽wanted to do a PhD in earth or environmental sciences. For the application to the department in Cambridge, I聽had chosen a聽project on ancient ocean chemistry, but there was a space on the form for a second-choice project. The project on the tropospheric chemistry of volcanic plumes was one of the few others I聽understood the title of, and I鈥檇 enjoyed visiting an erupting volcano on R茅union in 1998. I聽put it down and, when the offer came through, I聽decided I聽wanted to swap to the volcano project.

Have you had a eureka moment in your career?
Not [a big one] really, but lots of little ones. Every time I聽work out how something works 鈥 however small it is 鈥 it feels in that tiny moment like I鈥檝e solved something major.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

How did it feel to win the Royal Society Rosalind Franklin Award?
Amazing. Carol Robinson, Dr聽Lee鈥檚 professor of chemistry at Oxford, nominated me. She is someone I聽like and admire greatly, so being put forward by her was a massive boost. To win it was incredible and very unexpected. The evening of the lecture was great, after I聽had gotten over the nerves, and is a wonderful memory聽鈥撀爀specially the part where my son, who was sitting in the front, gave me the 鈥渓oser鈥 sign at the end while I聽was taking applause. It has also given me the opportunity to undertake an outreach project to promote women and girls in STEM, which I聽am really enjoying.

What has been your most exciting part of your research?
Making measurements at active volcanoes is very exciting. The longest field trip I聽have done so far was six weeks in Chile during my PhD. Highlights included climbing Lascar volcano (5,500m altitude) in the Atacama Desert 鈥 it felt like the top of the world 鈥 and sliding down the ice cap of Villarrica volcano after days sampling in the fumes at the crater rim.

What are the best and worst things about your job?
The best things for me are fieldwork and working with local scientists, getting new data in and making sense of it, and seeing students succeed. The worst things are exam marking, when a grant or paper that you put your all into gets rejected and when unnecessary bureaucracy takes too much of my time away from the really productive stuff.

What are the challenges faced by women in STEM?
Close female colleagues have experienced some terrible and blatant sexual harassment, and universities globally need to combat this sort of behaviour. These cases are at one end of a spectrum of cultures and structures that add up to disadvantage under-represented groups in STEM.

Are they being addressed?
Initiatives such as Athena SWAN have made academia think about these issues. There is certainly positive progress, but it is slow in some areas. The Athena SWAN process is very bureaucratic and can end up taking time away from the very people it is supposed to be supporting. I聽really appreciate that volcanology in the UK benefits from having great female scientists at all levels of the career ladder. I聽am also very mindful of the BAME under-representation in geosciences in the UK.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

What one thing would improve your working week?
At least a day a week free of distractions, to think, read and write.

What divides your life into a 鈥榖efore鈥 and 鈥榓fter鈥?
When our son was diagnosed with leukaemia in October 2014. The treatment lasted three and a half years, and we met many other families on the ward. Now we just go in for three- to six-monthly check-ups, but I聽don鈥檛 think my perspective on the world will ever be the same.

What would you like to be remembered for?
I had a bit of a crisis about this when our son got ill. I聽felt that everything that I聽did was completely pointless compared聽with the amazing people who had discovered the drugs that gave hope to us and other parents on the ward. I聽don鈥檛 dwell on this so much now, but just try to do science that I聽am proud of and interested by on a daily basis, and to make the most of it when it might be useful to the world more widely or when it inspires others.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

anna.mckie@timeshighereducation.com


Appointments

Samuel Stanley will be the next president of Michigan State University. Professor Stanley, who has been the president of New York鈥檚 Stony Brook University since 2009, will take the helm at MSU in August. He will be the institution鈥檚 first permanent president since the resignation last year of Lou Anna Simon, who was criticised for her handling of a sexual abuse scandal. Professor Stanley said that he recognised that the university community had 鈥渂een profoundly troubled by the events of the past years that have shaken confidence in the institution鈥. 鈥淲e will meet these challenges together, and we will build on the important work that has already been done to create a campus culture of diversity, inclusion, equity, accountability and safety,鈥 he said.

Cisca Wijmenga has been appointed rector magnificus of the University of Groningen, overseeing the institution鈥檚 academic activities. The professor of genetics will be the first woman to take up the role and only the second female board member in the university鈥檚 405-year history. Professor Wijmenga, who in 2015 won the most prestigious research prize in the Netherlands 鈥 the Spinoza Prize 鈥 will succeed Elmer Sterken in September. Her appointment 鈥渕eans that an acclaimed academic will be at the helm of our teaching and research鈥, said Tjibbe Joustra, chair of the university鈥檚 supervisory board.

Mark Holton is joining Middlesex University in August as chief people officer. He is currently director of group organisation development at Coventry University.

Mercedes Ram铆rez Fern谩ndez will become the University of Rochester鈥檚 first vice-president for equity and inclusion. She is currently associate vice-provost for strategic affairs and diversity at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Karin Gwinn Wilkins has been announced as the new dean of the University of Miami鈥檚 School of Communication. She will move from the University of Texas at Austin and succeed Gregory Shepherd in September.

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT