MARGARET SWIFT
  • home
  • about
  • cv & pubs
  • research =
    • rare antelope population crash and non-recovery
    • how water access drives antelope movements
    • undergraduate work
  • communication =
    • free lesson plans & tutorials
    • 2022 gradx ted talk
    • 2023 savanna science
    • skype a scientist
    • science writing
  • decoloniality & dei =
    • decolonizing my science
    • my land acknowledgements
    • going beyond land acknowledgement
    • reading list
  • art =
    • short fiction
    • nature photography
    • portraits
  • blog

friends & family


My favorite pictures of my favorite humans.
My friend Lucas, wearing a black shirt, walks through a field of grass. A mountainside rises behind him, covered in gorse, shrubs, and rock.
Henry stands in a blue-and-khaki jacket, preparing to let out a fierce two-fingered whistle. Eric, in a black cap and red plaid shirt, moves to stop him. They both stand in some grass with a fence and the ocean behind them.
Erin, a woman with curly blond hair in a ponytail, walks through a field of grass in front of a farmhouse.
My brother Nathan, with short dark hair and a beard, wearing a black-and-white long sleeved striped shirt. He strikes a hands-in-pockets pose against a gray foggy sky.
Erin, with blonde hair and wearing a white off-the-shoulder dress, stands in front of a faded brick wall. She smiles and looks away, holding sunflowers in her right hand.
Phoebe grins in front of a snowy hillside, face shrouded by her fuzzy green parka.
Erin, a white woman with blonde hair and a white dress, stands confidently in front of a teal siding, sunflowers in hand.
Ian expresses wonder at the Icelandic coastline, mouth agape and eyes wide behind his glasses. He wears a windbreaker and a gray rainslicker.
Victoria, a woman with dark hair and a thick gray scarf, smiles in front of a bright blue Icelandic sea, small icebergs floating behind her.
Henry, a white man with red hair tied in a bun, wades through dune grass, only his torso visible.
My mother and sister grin, hugging, in front of a lighthouse.
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  • home
  • about
  • cv & pubs
  • research =
    • rare antelope population crash and non-recovery
    • how water access drives antelope movements
    • undergraduate work
  • communication =
    • free lesson plans & tutorials
    • 2022 gradx ted talk
    • 2023 savanna science
    • skype a scientist
    • science writing
  • decoloniality & dei =
    • decolonizing my science
    • my land acknowledgements
    • going beyond land acknowledgement
    • reading list
  • art =
    • short fiction
    • nature photography
    • portraits
  • blog