Professor David Sunderlin gives first-year students a dose of island culture
David Sunderlin, assistant professor of geology and  environmental geosciences, is a self-proclaimed ‘islomaniac,’  “fascinated by the natural history of islands and all isolated  situations.”
“My best travel experiences have been to islands (Coastal Carolina,  Iceland, Tahiti, the Bahamas, the Lesser Antilles, Mediterranean  islands, Hawaii, etc.) and one can’t help but notice the unique ‘look  and feel’ of island life,” Sunderlin says.
During the fall semester, he used his life-long love affair with  island geography and culture to help orient his first-year students to  the college experience in the First-Year Seminar “Islands and  Isolation.”
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Sunderlin describes the course as an interdisciplinary exploration of  all different types of islands and the impact that the culture of  isolation associated with islands has had on the history of the world.  This involves studies of the origin and evolution of the Earth’s  biodiversity, the rise and fall of isolated human cultures throughout  history, and the human psychological implications of isolation.
Sunderlin’s goal was to sharpen his students’ abilities as  intellectuals and researchers as well as develop in them an  understanding of the phenomenon of isolation.
“[I’m] concerned with fostering intellectual curiosity and developing  the skills to follow that curiosity through research and writing,”  explains Sunderlin. “Most important in my mind was that students  developed the ability to ask probing and interesting questions and then  become proficient in answering those questions in well-structured and  insightful written work.
“Isolation is an integral ingredient in many of the patterns we can  observe on Earth,” he continues. “I hope the students became keen in  recognizing all the various phenomena involving isolation, and not just  on islands like Hawaii and Madagascar.”
Students discovered during the course that isolated island habitats  exist beyond commonly associated islands surrounded by water, according  to Sunderlin.
“We talked about ‘true’ islands in the classical sense first; the  Galapagos, Tahiti, Bahamas, etc,” says Sunderlin. “We then branched out  to consider what other unconventional ‘islands’ might be. Just a few  such isolated habitats are isolated mountaintop ecosystems, forests  patches among agricultural lands, and ponds and lakes. Thus, most of the  first half of the course focused on the growing field of ‘Island  biogeography.’ The second half of the course involved an investigation  of isolation’s effect on medical conditions, languages, and cultural  traditions, as well as how societal change may mirror some aspects of  patterns we observe in isolated ‘natural’ populations.”
Students also received an introduction to quantitative analysis with an island biogeography computer simulation.
“[In the computer simulation,] students modeled a virtual coastline  and island chain offshore to test hypotheses of immigration and  extinction rates among cyber-birds dispersing to those islands,”  explains Sunderlin.
Fieldwork also consumed a small portion of the class. The class took a  camping trip, or ‘isolation retreat’ into the Pocono Mountains at the  end of September where they “boated to actual islands in lakes to  observe the ecological community in isolation and also reflected on our  own feelings out there on our own,” says Sunderlin.
For Sunderlin, his research interests in Earth history and  paleontology are wrapped up in his ravenous curiosity about islands and  isolated life.
“My primary research is on the biogeography of forest types over the  last 250 million years: what forests have looked like through time and  where they occur on Earth,” he explains. “Much of my work takes place in  Alaska. Even though the state is now a major projection off of North  America, it is actually comprised of fragments of land that existed as  individual or interconnected islands off in the Pacific Ocean and came  together over time. I study the fossil record of the ancient island  systems in hopes of understanding their paleoclimate and how biological  evolution progressed there. So, this course is not entirely isolated  from my primary research interests (pun intended).”
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