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July 16. Special Event ST&T: A Moonwalk to Celebrate the Moon Landing.

July 16. 845 pm
Beltline at Fourth Ward Skatepark and King of Pops Window. There is street parking on North Highland Ave and a garage on Elizabeth Ave. Aim your GPS toward: 830 Willoughby Way NE, Atlanta, GA 30312

50 years ago man landed on the moon. Let’s take a walk on the night of the Full Moon (and 50 years from the day the Apollo mission launched toward the moon) and learn about our closest celestial neighbor.

Join us for a special edition ST&T held in conjunction with our partners: the Atlanta Science Festival and their “Month of the Moon” festival.

Our speaker will be: Scott Harris, Staff Planetary Geologist, Fernbank Science Center

A sixth-generation Georgia native, Scott Harris became interested in geology at a young age, examining his first thin section under the petrographic microscope at age 7. Receiving his formal education in planetary geology at Arizona State University, the University of Georgia, and Brown University, he has been fortunate to have been mentored by some of the icons in the field. A Goldwater Scholar, NASA Space Grant Fellow, and Circumnavigators Foundation Fellow, Scott has worked on basaltic volcanoes and asteroid impact craters all over the globe for comparison to spacecraft data from the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, and the moons of Jupiter. 

Settling back in his home state, Scott has served as visiting lecturer of mineralogy at Georgia State University, visiting researcher in impact geology at Auburn University, and geologist for the Georgia Department of Transportation. In 2014, he seized the opportunity to become the staff planetary geologist at Fernbank Science Center and the Jim Cherry Memorial Planetarium where he strives to educate and inspire the next generation of scientists and explorers.

Amy Sharma, PhD, is Executive Director of Science for Georgia.
Dr. Sharma has worked in many aspects of the engineering field: Product Management at Predikto, spearheading the development of the big data vertical and managing a $1M annual Independent Research and Development (IRAD) program at GTRI, working as an Assistant Professor in Medical Physics at the University of Western Australia, working as an Assistant Program Manager for the National Science Foundation, receiving political and outreach training as a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow, obtaining a PhD in Biomedical Engineering at Duke University, and designing hardware logic for advanced server microprocessors at IBM.
Dr Sharma enjoys difficult challenges, jobs with overly long titles, communicating scientific and technical ideas to non-scientists, brewing her own beer, and smoking various foods.

Science for Georgia is a 501(c)(3). We work to build a bridge between scientists and the public and advocate for the responsible use of science in public policy.

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