14-01 2021 22:19
wrote:
Hugh Brammer was undisputedly the most authoritative expert on soils, landforms, floods, and climate change in Bangladesh. His main expertise was in field research and his strength was in his attention to the details. His contributions to the details of micro-landforms of floodplains of Bangladesh are surprisingly refreshing. Many of us who have done fieldwork in Bangladesh for decades have failed to appreciate what Hugh discovered in the field. Similarly, his recent analyses of long-term climatic data for large numbers of stations in Bangladesh have debunked some of the conventional claims of climate change in Bangladesh. Above all, I recall that Hugh was a champion of the now-defunct FAP project in Bangladesh.
Hugh was also a generous person. He reviewed some of my research papers. He did not hesitate to provide constructive criticisms but was always generous with his input to improve scholarship. I will miss him very much as a scholarly mentor.
14-01 2021 22:19
wrote:
Hugh Brammer was undisputedly the most authoritative expert on soils, landforms, floods, and climate change in Bangladesh. His main expertise was in field research and his strength was in his attention to the details. His contributions to the details of micro-landforms of floodplains of Bangladesh are surprisingly refreshing. Many of us who have done fieldwork in Bangladesh for decades have failed to appreciate what Hugh discovered in the field. Similarly, his recent analyses of long-term climatic data for large numbers of stations in Bangladesh have debunked some of the conventional claims of climate change in Bangladesh. Above all, I recall that Hugh was a champion of the now-defunct FAP project in Bangladesh.
Hugh was also a generous person. He reviewed some of my research papers. He did not hesitate to provide constructive criticisms but was always generous with his input to improve scholarship. I will miss him very much as a scholarly mentor.