DEI-aligned Travel Awards
The AGU Cryosphere Section Student/Post-doc/Recent Graduates Travel Grant for Diversity (CryoStuD) (pronounced: cryo-study) was established to support students and early career researchers from traditionally marginalized groups, as well as those active in the diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) space, who are presenting their research at the AGU Fall Meeting. This grant aims to enhance DEI within the cryosphere community by providing financial support for conference participation. Eligible applicants include students and recent graduates affiliated with the AGU Cryosphere Sciences section. Recipients will present their research, engage in networking events, and contribute to sessions focused on building and broadening the cryosphere science community. The grant is administered by the AGU Cryosphere DEI Working Group.
What past recipients have to say:
The Cryosphere DEI Travel Award enabled me to attend my first AGU meeting and publicly present my ice-shelf modeling work for the first time. I received invaluable feedback from colleagues that I otherwise would not have gotten to meet, and got to know the people behind some of my favorite papers.
The AGU CryoStuD award allowed me to mentor four high school students from the GeoFORCE program that attended their first AGU Fall Meeting. It was an unforgettable experience to introduce them to the cryosphere community and network.
Thanks to the AGU Cryosphere DEI award, I was able to travel across the country to San Francisco from New York to connect with peers and colleagues that I would never get the chance to connect with in-person. I was able to attend many wonderful talks and have my best conference experience yet because of this grant.
This award helped me with participating in AGU and presenting my work, which led to valuable connections and advancing my research.
As a non-traditional graduate student, the AGU Cryosphere DEI Travel Award helped me afford travel to AGU to communicate my science to the cryosphere community and connect with the geoscience DEI community. By attending AGU, I was able to assist hosting an event for early-career researchers and attend events for the queer geoscience community.
The CryoStuD travel award was instrumental in giving me the opportunity to present my work at a key career stage, meet other great scientists in the field after many years (due to Covid), and learn more about the wide variety of work being done in the cryosphere.
Applications for the AGU25 CryoStuD will open in Fall 2025
Eligibility: Students from any high school, tribal schools/college, community college, university, graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and recent graduates (within 3 years of earning their degrees) who are presenting their research at the AGU Fall Meeting and are affiliated with the AGU Cryosphere Sciences section are eligible to apply. Students who self-identify to be from traditionally marginalized groups, including, but not limited to, Black/African American, Indigenous/Native American, Latinx/Hispanic, Asian/Asian American, women, LGBTQ+, and people with disabilities, are especially encouraged to apply. US citizenship is not required.
Questions about the award can be directed to Luke Trusel, current chair of the AGU Cryo DEI Working Group.
Past Recipients
2024
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Allen, Jaela
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Hermosilla, Carm
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Jewell, MacKenzie
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Khatiwada, Ashlesha
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León, Rhys-Jasper
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Lerman, Eliza
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Liu, Jukes
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Mirza, Bareera
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Needell, Caroline
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Omar, Samara
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Shadab, Mohammad Afzal
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Skelton, Emma
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Tarzona, Angelo
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Trivedi, Shreya
2023
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Gifty Attiah
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Mahsa Bahrami
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Izuchukwu Ezukanma
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Maya Fields
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Emily Glazer
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Minki Kim
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Haejo Kim
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Carmen Nab
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Mikayla Pascual
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Ipshita Pradhan
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Meghana Ranganathan
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Emma Robertson
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Kevin Shionalyn
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Madison Woodley
2022
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Smriti Srivastava
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Sarah Wells-Moran