Jeremy Snyder
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​Portfolio

A screenshot of the title page of a StoryMap titled
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Visual Storytelling

StoryMaps and other visual narratives using photography
A scientific illustration of a floating wind turbine with pop-out bubbles illustrating several technical details

Graphic Design and Digital Illustration

Digital art, diagrams, logos, and layouts for science and beyond
A picture of Jeremy at a podium in front of a large projector screen bearing one of his photos

Teaching, Hosting, and Presenting

Being in front of the camera and mic

StoryMaps

Aerial view of a geothermal power plant
Power and Promise Beneath the Salton Sea
An educational deep-dive about sustainably harvesting lithium from the brine used to generate geothermal electricity. U
sed by LBNL scientists for outreach to local community stakeholders. 
Several people in a line skiing through snow-covered mountains, witht he blazing sun forming a starburst low on the horizon
Field Days: Tracking Weather and Water in the Rockies
A brief look at a day in the life of scientists studying the weather and snowpack that feeds the Colorado River.

Aerial view of a geothermal power plant
The Beaver Believers
A personal project in collaboration with the US Forest Service to capture the science of beaver-based river restoration
Several people in a line skiing through snow-covered mountains, witht he blazing sun forming a starburst low on the horizon
Data Streams
An educational piece for a K-12 audience exploring networked sensors and watershed science in the headwaters of the Colorado River
see more Visual Storytelling

Posters

I developed these posters to communicate Berkeley Lab's science at the American Geophysical Union (AGU) conference
What Happens When Rainforests Dry Out? Berkeley Lab scientists with the NGEE-Tropics project are investigating how rainforests, from the Amazon to Malaysia, respond to drought. Using buried soil moisture sensors, sap-flow sensors in trees, and atmospheric observation towers, they create a soil-to-sky picture of water movement in the ecosystem. These insights are crucial for predicting the future of tropical forests and guiding conservation strategies.
What Can We Learn When the Sun Disappears? In April 2024, a total solar eclipse swept across North America, and Berkeley Lab scientists turned this celestial event into a unique research opportunity. Leveraging the extensive Ameriflux network of eddy covariance flux towers, they explored how the sudden absence of solar radiation affects gas exchange in terrestrial ecosystems—a variable nearly impossible to alter artificially.
What Happens When the Arctic Warms? - Berkeley Lab scientists discovered how longer, hotter growing seasons are causing increased annual methane emissions from boreal Arctic wetlands. Research by the national lab’s Earth and Environmental Sciences Area pulled together an unprecedented dataset to demonstrate this, using a network of portable gas exchange chambers and eddy covariance flux towers installed around the Arctic circle.
What's Beneath the Lunar Surface? In collaboration with NASA, Berkeley Lab scientists are developing innovative techniques to identify the qualities and quantities of ice beneath the surface of the moon. By analyzing seismic vibrations generated by a rover equipped with a rock drill, this innovative method aims to “see” the ice that is suspected to exist near the shadowed walls of lunar craters, which may someday be a source of water for a moon base.
See more graphic design

Photography

To purchase prints, visit the store
Print Store
Photos on this website are the property of Jeremy Snyder and cannot be reproduced or reused without permission.

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