Marie Elizabeth Sanderson (1921-2010; néeLustig) was a Canadian geographer and climatologist.[1][2][3][4]
Early life and education
Marie Lustig was born on 16 November 1921 in Chesley, Ontario, Canada.[1] She was one of the earliest graduates in geography from the University of Toronto, and then gained an MA from the University of Maryland and a PhD from the University of Michigan.[4] At Toronto she began a course in Social and Philosophical Studies but after enjoying the geography element, taught by Griffith Taylor, she enrolled for honours in geography, and was one of only three students to graduate in that subject in 1944. Taylor taught her climatology and, as a survivor of Robert Falcon Scott's 1910-1912 Terra Nova Expedition, inspired her interest in Arctic regions.[1]
She married Robert Sanderson, described as her "childhood sweetheart", on 3 August 1946.[4]
Career
Sanderson studied with C. W. Thornthwaite while studying for her master's degree, and in 1949 she set up evapotranspirometers he had designed as part of the first climate experiment in Northwest Territories, at Norman Wells.[1]
She was appointed as an assistant professor of geography at the University of Windsor in 1965, and taught there until her retirement in 1989. She was the first female professor of geography in Canada. In 1980 she and Paul Hebert founded the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research (GLIER) at the university. After her retirement from Windsor she became an adjunct professor of the University of Waterloo and established the Water Network there.[1]
In 1993 Ryerson University, now Toronto Metropolitan University, awarded Sanderson a Ryerson Fellowship (an award for " individuals whose significant accomplishments exemplify the polytechnic ideal") for "Expanding the Role of Women in Geographic Research and Education".[5]
She was awarded honorary degrees by the universities of Lethbridge, Toronto, Waterloo, and Windsor. That from Toronto, a Doctorate of Laws in the category "Scholarship - Geography",[6] was given in 2010 when she was too ill with breast cancer to attend a ceremony, but the university chancellor and president and the chair of the geography department visited her at her home in their full academic robes to confer the degree.[1]
Sanderson, Marie (1987). Implications of climatic change for navigation and power generation in the Great Lakes : summary of Great Lakes Institute reports. [Ottawa]: Climate Program Office, Canadian Climate Centre. ISBN9780662554905.
Sanderson, Marie (1988). Griffith Taylor : Antarctic scientist and pioneer geographer. Ottawa: Carleton University Press. ISBN9780886290689.
Sanderson, Marie; Borzenkova, I. I. (1990). Unesco sourcebook in climatology for hydrologists and water resource engineers. Paris: Unesco. ISBN9789231027123.
Sanderson, Marie (1993). The Impact of climate change on water in the Grand River basin, Ontario. [Waterloo, Ont.]: Dept. of Geography, University of Waterloo. ISBN9780921083481.
Mather, John R.; Sanderson, Marie (1996). The genius of C. Warren Thornthwaite, climatologist-geographer. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN9780806127873.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Sanderson, Marie (1993). Prevailing trade winds : climate and weather in Hawaii. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN9780824814915.
Putnam, Robert G.; Sanderson, Marie (2000). Down to earth : a biography of geographer Donald Fulton Putnam. University of Toronto, Department of Geography. ISBN9780772781505.
Sanderson, Marie (2009). High heels in the tundra : my life as a geographer and climatologist. [S.l.]: iUniverse Inc. ISBN9781440147210.
^Andrey, Jean (March 2011). "High Heels in the Tundra: My Life as a Geographer and Climatologist by Marie Sanderson". The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe canadien. 55 (1): 127–128. doi:10.1111/j.1541-0064.2010.00350.x. Also available online