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FOCUS ON THE FACULTY
LOOKING FOR ANSWERS IN THE GREAT BEYOND
by Jason O'Coin
Leslie Sautter
Leslie Sautter
Geology

Oceanographer Sylvia A. Earle once said, "Going into the ocean is like diving into the history of life on earth."  It is this history and a love of teaching others that drives College of Charleston Geology Professor Dr.Leslie Sautter.  Her life and career have been spent in the endless quest of knowledge of the earth and sea.  

"As a Geological Oceanographer I try to understand the physical, chemical, biological and geological processes and how they interact, because it is a full system, an ecosystem that we study." Sautter says.  It was in pursuit of this knowledge and a zeal for teaching that led Sautter to the College of Charleston. It has been during her tenure here at the college; with a grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) that Dr. Sautter has been able to start Project Oceanica. 

“Leslie's vision for (Project) Oceanica has always been larger than life and if money grew on trees it would truly be a phenomenal program," comments Rachel McEvers, Project Manager of Project Oceanica and a College of Charleston graduate. "However, I have to say that she has certainly done the most with the funds we have received.  The programs developed by Leslie and the  (Project) Oceanica staff have reached people from high school and college students to teachers, college faculty and the public in general.  Her constant flow of ideas and the implementation of those ideas are an incredible asset to the college and to those who experience and utilize (Project) Oceanica's programs and resources.”

Project Oceanica allows Sautter to share her knowledge as a researcher not only with the many undergraduates involved in the program at the college level, but also with scores of elementary, middle, and high school aged children and their teachers that have participated in one of Oceanicas many programs as well.

Leslie Sautter was born in New Jersey and was delivered by her own grandfather, a pediatrician. When she was in first grade she moved to Hamilton, NY, where her father was a psychology professor at Colgate University and where she would spend the majority of her childhood years.

She spent summers on the shores of New Jersey and Cape Cod, Mass gaining an immense love of the ocean.  Her love of rocks would come in a similar fashion, "My family traveled a lot in the country and did a lot of camping.” Sautter says, adding “I have two older brothers and one summer we spent the whole summer camping in the national parks and as a result of that all three of us became geologists." It was that summer and the many summers at the shores that led Sautter into the geological sciences, or to be more exact marine geology.

Sautter graduated with a degree in geology from Tufts University in Boston, Mass. After graduating she studied oceanography for half a year at the University of Washington in Seattle, "That was my semester abroad.” laughed Sautter.

Immediately after college she spent time working at the United States Geological Survey (USGS) in Woods Hole, Mass. While on a research cruise aboard a drilling vessel she met a recent Ph.D. graduate of the University of South Carolina who told her of his first-rate experiences with the USC geology faculty.   Sautter headed to the University of South Carolina where she earned not only her masters but also her Ph.D. in geological sciences.

She obtained post doctorate work in 1990 at Columbia University in New York.   Being from the north and not really wanting to stay in Columbia, South Carolina at the time, she and her husband Mike, along with a three year old and a newborn baby packed up and made the long trek to New York.

After a year at Columbia she began to look for new opportunities and she found one and as she tells it, "I walked into a job at South Carolina Sea Grant which is part of NOAA here in Charleston."  The position was set up as a joint position at the College of Charleston which was exactly the kind of institution at which Dr. Sautter was looking to teach.

At the College of Charleston she was able to begin teaching classes in among other things marine and coastal geology, and general marine science for teachers with an emphasis on plate tectonics.  She has been a driving force of the education of undergraduates at the college promoting undergraduate research and becoming a pioneer in the development of new marine science teaching methods.  This hard work and dedication resulted in her being presented with the 2002 National Marine Education Award. 

Sautter’s hard work and dedication is also recognized by her colleagues. College of Charleston Biology professor Dr. Gorka Sancho had this to say about Sautter, "Doc is one of the most dynamic and imaginative professors in the college, and she is fully focused on providing quality hands-on marine science education opportunities to her students at CofC (College of Charleston), as well as many others in the state of South Carolina. Her leadership in creating programs that give students opportunities to immerse themselves in ocean-going research is a great asset which greatly contributes to CofC providing the best marine science education opportunities in the state"

Project Oceanica's goal is to develop programs and resources to expand coastal and oceanographic research in the Southeast with an emphasis on teaching and developing the undergraduate for work in the fields of oceanography and marine geology. It also offers elementary, middle, and high school teachers an opportunity to learn more about the field of marine science.    Project Oceanica is made up of three parts, the “Transect Program” for college undergraduates, the “At Sea Program” for high school student research, and the “COASTeamProgram”, a marine science course and classroom and research program for educators.

"This research cruise is a once-in-a-lifetime experience” says Liz Symon a Marine Biology major at the College of Charleston and participant of the Transect Program. Liz goes on to say “Without a doubt, [the Transect Program] has fueled my desire to pursue my dream and has opened up my world to the loads of opportunities that await me in the future of marine biological and oceanographic research." 

Dr. Sautter hopes to continue to grow Project Oceanica in the coming years and has already had contact with such schools as the University of South Carolina, Coastal Carolina, and Savannah State. These schools, having had professors participate in Sautter’s research cruises have expressed great interest and enthusiasm in regards to the Transect Program.  

Walt Whitman said in Miracles in 1856 "To me the sea is a continual miracle; the fishes that swim, the rocks, the motion of the waves, the ships, with men in them. What stranger miracles are there?" 

Dr. Leslie Sautter has made her life's work discovering and understanding these miracles in an effort to pass on this understanding to the rest of the world. 

For more information on Dr. Leslie Sautter and Project Oceanica you can visit the Project Oceanica web site at http://oceanica.cofc.edu/home.htm

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