Member Since 1987
Rosemary J. Knight
Professor of Geophysics, Stanford University
Rosemary Knight is the George L. Harrington Professor of Earth Sciences in the Geophysics Department at Stanford and Senior Fellow in the Woods Institute. Rosemary has worked for more than 30 years on the challenge of using geophysical methods for groundwater science and management. Collaboration with local and state agencies and with nonprofit organizations to move “knowledge into action” has been, and remains, central to the work done by Rosemary with her students and postdoctoral associates.
Professional Experience
Stanford University
Professor of Geophysics
2000 - Present
Education
Stanford University
Doctorate
1985
Honors & Awards
Union Fellow
Received December 2023
Ambassador Award
Received December 2023
Citation
Rosemary Knight seeks to bring “knowledge into action”; this translates to a career spent working at the cutting edge of near-surface geophysical research applied to solve key water resource problems. Through her career, her research has focused on new methods for acquiring, processing and interpreting geophysical data as well as their application to important problems. Knight’s passion for making research applicable led to the creation of the Stanford Center for Groundwater Evaluation and Management (the GEM Center) in 2008. Through the GEM Center, Knight works with water managers to develop, demonstrate and promote an integrated, data-driven approach to groundwater evaluation and management that uses advanced and emerging geophysical technologies, including electrical resistivity imaging), nuclear magnetic resonance, airborne electromagnetics (AEM) and remote sensing. She has partnered with 19 local, state and federal agencies, including the U.S. Geological Survey and the California Department of Water Resources, to assess water quality and quantity in California. Her work has ranged from identifying areas of saltwater intrusion from excessive pumping — which was critical to establishing sustainable water management practices in northern Salinas Valley and Monterey Bay — to detecting areas of subsidence due to over pumping, identifying recharge pathways and predicting how groundwater recharge can reduce subsidence in California’s Central Valley. The state of California has surveyed all of California’s high- and medium-priority groundwater basins using AEM under Knight’s guidance. The surveys are ongoing, and the data are currently being used to make critical sustainable water management decisions and impact communities living across the state of California.

While her work in groundwater resource evaluation and management has been transformative, Knight was also fundamental in building the community of near-surface geophysics. She was a founding member of the three major communities that bring near-surface geophysicists together: the Environmental and Engineering Geophysical Society in 1990 and then the Near-Surface Geophysics sections of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists and AGU in 2005. As of 2022, the Near-Surface Geophysics section has grown to 600+ primary members and nearly 3,000 secondary members. Knight is a visionary Earth scientist, a trailblazer, a generous mentor, a role model and a champion of near-surface geophysics. She has left a rich legacy of scientific discovery, mentorship, professional service and societal benefits in her wake and is consequently an excellent candidate for the AGU Ambassador Award.

— Kamini Singha, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado
Response
“Knowledge into action.” When I see my words as the opening to the citation, I find myself asking, How did this start? What moved me in this direction? Thinking back, I am quite sure it all began with reading two short statements about 30 years ago. The first defined vocation: “You are called to work in the place where your great gladness and the world’s great hunger meet.” The second, copied onto a scrap of paper that I still have, dates from 1991: “It is no longer enough to publish our ideas in refereed journals. The emphasis today should be to work with the users of the information we produce.”  So what did I do? I started moving my research from the laboratory to the field, getting closer to the community of people working in groundwater science and management, the people I saw as end users of the information my research group was producing. Instead of controlled laboratory experiments we started taking on as-controlled-as-possible (welcome to fieldwork!) field experiments to study how geophysical measurements could be used to map and monitor hydrogeologic properties and processes. But that still was not enough.  In 2008, we took the major step needed to close the knowledge-into-action gap by putting partnerships with end users at the center of our research. Adam Pidlisecky and I founded the Center for Groundwater Evaluation and Management at Stanford. The unchanged material on the website (gemcenter.stanford.edu) is as much a description of my research program today as it was then: “Central to our approach is the establishment of partnerships that allow the GEM Center to demonstrate state-of-the-science solutions to ‘real-world’ problems . . . encouraging the adoption of new approaches, and new technologies, for addressing the challenging problems we face in the evaluation and management of our groundwater resources.” Creating this center, clearly defining partnerships as a top priority, changed my life. And it had a huge impact on my graduate program. Knowledge without action was no longer acceptable to me or for those I mentored. I found colleagues throughout the near-surface geophysics community who shared this commitment, and together we have built a network of people engaged in discovery science but committed to the action needed to address the challenges we face in climate change and sustainability. I am deeply gratified that this award recognizes the value of knowledge into action. The award goes to an amazing group of students, postdoctoral fellows, research scientists, collaborators and real-world partners who made it all happen and made it all fun. — Rosemary Knight, Stanford University, Standford, California
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Publications
Isolating the Poroelastic Response of the Groundwater System in InSAR Data From the Central Valley o...

Working with 5 years (2015–2019) of high quality interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data covering the Central Valley of Ca...

April 28, 2023
AGU Abstracts
Integration of Airborne Electromagnetic and InSAR Data into a Groundwater Model; Example from the Kaweah Subbasin
HYDROGEOPHYSICS: ADVANCES IN INVERSION, DATA FUSION, AND APPLICATIONS OF MACHINE LEARNING II ORAL
hydrology | 15 december 2023
Meredith Goebel, Rosemary J. Knight, Seogi Kang, J...
Groundwater models can be important tools when developing plans for sustainable groundwater management, allowing managers to better understand their g...
View Abstract
fastpath: Harnessing the Power of Geophysical Imaging to Recharge California’s Groundwater
ADVANCING THE USE OF GEOPHYSICAL AND GEODETIC METHODS FOR GROUNDWATER SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT I POSTER
near surface geophysics | 13 december 2023
Rosemary J. Knight, Seogi Kang, Meredith Goebel
Identifying an optimal site for managed groundwater recharge requires considering many factors, one of which is the subsurface geology. If the recharg...
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Monitoring Groundwater Recharge in California’s San Joaquin Valley through the Integration of Satellite and Airborne Observations
FROM SPACE TO SOLUTIONS: LEVERAGING SATELLITE EARTH OBSERVATIONS FOR EFFECTIVE WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT II ORAL
hydrology | 13 december 2023
Wesley Neely, Rosemary J. Knight, Meredith Goebel,...
One of the great unknowns, in the functioning of the groundwater systems of Californias San Joaquin Valley, is the timing and quantity of recharge. Al...
View Abstract

Volunteer Experience
2016 - 2017
Associate Editor
JGR Solid Earth Section
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