TC
Member Since 2023
Tvetene Carlson
Student, University of California Berkeley
Environmental Engineering PhD candidate studying tidal renewable energy in rural Alaska. Focused on community engaged research to learn about renewable energy impacts on subsistence hunting, fishing, and gathering. Also dabbling in experimental fluid mechanics to characterize a tidal energy device's relationship between lift, drag, and roughness.
Professional Experience
University of California Berkeley
Student
2023 - Present
Education
University of California Berkeley
Masters
2020
University of California Berkeley
Doctorate
AGU Abstracts
How Roughness Impacts a Model-Scale Novel Tidal Energy Kite
MARINE ENERGY TO POWER THE BLUE ECONOMY I ORAL
global environmental change | 10 december 2024
Tvetene Carlson, Evan Variano
Tidal energy kites are a developing technology that will provide an alternative to the rotary turbines for marine energy extraction that the Departmen...
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Towards co-produced numerical modeling - reflecting priorities from Indigenous communities
SOCIO-HYDROLOGY: CONNECTING WATER AND SOCIAL SCIENCE FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE I ORAL
25 june 2024
Yifan Cheng, Nicole M. Herman-Mercer, Keith N. Mus...
Numerical models play a vital role in quantifying the impacts of climate change on physical earth systems and ecosystems, and supporting science-based...
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Decolonized methodologies to identify renewable energy impacts on Alaskan Native Subsistence hunting, fishing, and gathering in the Native Village of Cantwell
INDIGENOUS SCIENCE TO ACTION: AUTHENTIC CONTEXTS FOR SUPPORTING INDIGENOUS PRIORITIES II POSTER
science and society | 12 december 2023
Tvetene Carlson, Evan Variano
In this paper I want to highlight two principles I used to conduct decolonial research in rural Alaska: to serve the community and to be respectful. T...
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