Katrina Voss
Katrina Voss worked as a bilingual broadcast meteorologist for The Weather Channel Latin America and AccuWeather[1] and holds the AMS Seal.[2] She is known for being a regular columnist for the secular humanist journal Free Inquiry magazine.[3] Her work has also appeared in New Scientist,[4] The Humanist,[5] and Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society where she wrote about sharing a name with a devastating hurricane.[6] After Hurricane Katrina's impact in 2005, her comments on hurricane naming and its psychological consequences were cited in the media.[7] [8] [9] [10] She has also questioned the merits of the American Meteorological Society's phasing out of their Seal of Approval and replacement with the Certified Broadcast Meteorologist (CBM) Seal.[11]
In an August 2009 issue of New Scientist, she took a controversial position on DNA privacy.[12]
She is a science education video contributor to SciVee[13] and is married to population geneticist Mark D. Shriver.
References
- ↑ AccuWeather
- ↑ American Meteorological Society List of Sealholders.
- ↑ Free Inquiry
- ↑ New Scientist 24 August 2009, "Your genome isn't that precious – give it away."
- ↑ The Humanist (www.thehumanist.org) July/August 2009, "If English was Good Enough."
- ↑ Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society June 2006, "Hurricane Ergo Sum."
- ↑ USA Today July 10, 2006, "Sharing a Name with 'the Genghis Khan of Hurricanes'."
- ↑ Wired Magazine (Wired Science) August 26, 2009 "What's in a (Hurricane) Name."
- ↑ ScienceLine July 26, 2006, "Hurricane-Your Name Here."
- ↑ Discovery Channel (Discover Channel news website) July 10, 2006, "Hurricane Naming Stirs Controversy."
- ↑ Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society May 2008, "On the Boxing of Broadcast Meteorologists."
- ↑
- ↑ SciVee