Katharine Giles


Katharine Anne Giles was a British climate scientist. Her research considered sea ice cover, ocean circulation and wind patterns. She was a passionate science communicator, and since 2015, the Association of British Science Writers has held a science blog award in her honour.

Early life and education

Giles was educated at The Hertfordshire and Essex High School, completing GCE A Levels in design technology, maths and physics. She was awarded first class honours for her degree in earth and space science at University College London. She volunteered at the Science Museum during her undergraduate studies. She earned her PhD for research supervised by Seymour Laxon in 2005. She performed the first ground-based experiments to show how to monitor sea ice thickness using satellite altimetery. An altimeter monitors electromagnetic waves reflected from the surface of ice.

Career and research

After completing her PhD, Giles remained at University College London as a postdoctoral researcher, studying the thickness of Arctic Ice. Giles demonstrated that sea ice floes could be used to demonstrate how winds affected the newly exposed Arctic Ocean. She was awarded a Natural Environment Research Council fellowship to study wind patterns in the Arctic at the Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling. Giles showed that fresh water in the Arctic Ocean was due to an intensifying of the winds in Beaufort Gyre. To prove this, Giles used the European Remote-Sensing Satellite and Envisat. She calculated that the sea surface in the Western Arctic rose by 15 cm between 2002 and 2012, and sea water had increased by 8000 cubic kilometres. By using the European Space Agency CryoSat-2, Giles identified that thick sea ice had disappeared from Greenland, the Canadian Archipelago and Svalbard. She found that between 2003 and 2012 the arctic sea ice volume in the winter had decreased by 9%. The findings confirmed the predictions of the Pan-Arctic Ice-Ocean Modelling & Assimilation System.
Giles was killed whilst cycling in 2013. She had just been appointed as a lecturer at University College London. Peter Wadhams believed that the death could have been an assassination, as Giles' colleagues Seymour Laxon and Tim Boyd all died within the first few months of 2013. In 2016 it was proposed to name the new Natural Environment Research Council research vessel /Royal Research Ship Katharine Giles.

The Dr Katharine Giles Fund

The Association of British Science Writers award a Dr Katharine Giles science blog prize each year. The prize is funded by the Dr Katharine Giles Fund, laureates include:
The Fund also awards free media training to young scientists who win the ABSW Student Science Journalist Award.

Family History in Climate Research

Giles's great, great grandfather was Edward Walter Maunder whose solar research, and in particular the period of rare sunspot activity, the Maunder Minimum, has been linked to historical variations in climate.