Atmospheric scientist follows her passion to global extremes

February 8th, 2025
Julianne Fernandez served as chief atmospheric scientist at the Admundsen-Scott South Pole Station for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Credit: Julianne Fernandez

Julianne Fernandez parlayed her experience as a University of Cincinnati geosciences student into a career that has taken her to the bottom of the world and thousands of feet beneath its surface.

Fernandez has explored the ocean bottom in a submarine and traveled to the South Pole in Antarctica to support atmospheric research in the coldest, driest and windiest place on Earth.

Fernandez grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago not far from Lake Michigan. She enrolled at UC after applying for a student research opportunity focused on the Great Lakes.

"I love the Great Lakes, so that's what interested me in coming to UC," she said. "I was interested in water chemistry and greenhouse gases mixing together."

Today, Fernandez is a flight scientist and atmospheric methane researcher. She lives in Boulder, Colorado, working in the oil and gas industry. At Scientific Aviation, Inc., she measures methane emissions from oil and gas facilities and landfills.

Fernandez has always been interested in the natural world. She studied oceanography at California State Polytechnic University and earned a doctorate in geology and earth science at the University of London, followed by a postdoctoral position at the University of Maryland studying rare methane isotopes.

At UC, she earned a master's degree in geology, taking advantage of UC's top-rated co-op program to get an internship with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. She would take an airboat to test water for oxygen levels, calcium and E. coli along the northern Mississippi River, even when it was completely frozen over.

"We'd bring an auger to break through the ice," she said. "Even in the winter, we could get to inaccessible areas with the airboat."

The internship helped her pay off some of her undergraduate student loans.

"Getting to go to school and getting paid—that was cool," she said.

Fernandez got the Army Corps internship through the federal Pathways Internship Program, which provides opportunities for early-career scientists.

"It is an outstanding opportunity and I would love for more UC students to take advantage of it," said her mentor, UC professor Amy Townsend-Small. "Students or recent graduates can participate in internships at federal agencies and it's a 'pathway' or a transition to a permanent federal job."

For her master's project, she accompanied the Canadian Coast Guard onto Lake Erie to take water samples.

She joined the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to serve as chief atmospheric scientist at the South Pole. She traveled from New Zealand to McMurdo Station off the coast of Antarctica, home to Adelie penguins and 90% of the world's ice.

While studying at the University of Cincinnati, Julianne Fernandez applied to conduct research in the deep-sea submersible Alvin at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Credit: Julianne Fernandez

From there she boarded a plane with skids for landing gear, landing on the ice at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station more than 800 miles inland.

"It really is the most remote place in the world—more remote even than the International Space Station," she said.

Winter temps there dip to minus 45 degrees.

The most remarkable thing is how featureless the landscape is, she said. The ice meets the horizon in every direction.

Arguably, her posting in Antarctica wasn't even her most extreme scientific endeavor.

At UC, Fernandez applied to the National Science Foundation to take part in an expedition aboard Alvin, the deep-ocean submarine that explorer Bob Ballard used to study the wreckage of the Titanic some 12,500 feet underwater.

"I think for some people it was scary. I get more excited," Fernandez said.

Alvin descended into the murky depths, dropping 4,200 feet or 1,300 meters below the surface of the North Atlantic Shelf.

A strobe light on Alvin triggered a response from bioluminescent marine life—tiny marine animals that can generate their own light.

"It's pitch black, but you see this rainfall of organisms. It's almost like a dream," she said. "I always thought the water column was empty in the deep sea, but there are all these little creatures."

Fernandez took water samples at newly discovered hydrothermal vents covered in clamshells on the ocean floor. Her family back home got to share her experience through a livestream of the dive.

Fernandez is mulling a return to Antarctica to continue her research. In the meantime, she is weighing the many career options available to her.

Her advice to students: apply for opportunities they find interesting even if they think they might be beyond their reach.

"Don't let self-doubt get in the way. We often don't see the full potential others see in us," she said.

Provided by University of Cincinnati