"When Dawn Wright submitted her master’s thesis in the 1980s — a geophysical survey of the Pacific Ocean’s Tonga Trench using sea-floor data collected by others — it was grudgingly approved. But her professor advised her afterwards that she had no future in oceanography and should consider a non-scientific profession.…Today, she is a distinguished oceanographer and chief scientist at Esri, a software company in Redlands, California, renowned for creating geographical information systems. In 2022, she became the fifth woman and the first Black person to visit Challenger Deep, the deepest place on Earth’s sea bed, nearly 11,000 metres beneath the Pacific Ocean’s surface…. Her charming life story, with many appealing images, is written by four Esri Press colleagues in collaboration with Wright. It shows how, in her words, “we can turn the unknown deep into the known deep”.
- Andrew Robinson, Nature, 2024’s best Books in brief (https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-024-04117-3)
<p>“Written lucidly and accompanied by an engaging collection of photographs, diagrams, explanatory asides and illuminating personal anecdotes, <i>Mapping the Deep</i> is perfect for anybody with a thirst for exploration – especially young adults looking for inspiring role models."</p>
- Neil Simpson, Dialogue Earth