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Following her junior year at Pomona, Laurel McFadden spent a summer month living on a windswept Norwegian fjord, where she worked freezing, 14-hour days studying an obscure bird known as the little auk. Occasionally, the birds bit and she was constantly bombarded from above with bird poop.

But McFadden loved working in the barren beauty of the arctic, with breathtaking views of glaciers and the chance to spot reindeer running free. “It was such a crazy adventure,” says McFadden, who went on the trip to help with research conducted by Assistant Professor of Biology Nina Karnovsky.

Attending Pomona College has taken McFadden to some very unexpected places, from a crowded hospital in China to the freezing fjords of Norway. And just wait until you hear about her next adventure. (More on that later.)

Her first trek was to China, through Pomona’s Study Abroad program. She wanted an entirely different experience than she had ever had before – and she got it, as she interned at an international hospital in bustling Beijing. Later, she witnessed the poverty of Hunan province in Southern China.

Only weeks after returning from her semester in China, she set off to Norway to conduct the bird research with Professor Karnovsky. Later, she was able to attend a scientific conference in Alaska, where she presented the results of her bird research. “I’ve had some absolutely incredible opportunities,” says McFadden.

McFadden is thankful to have a professor actively looking for opportunities for her, and a school that was able to provide the resources for her to travel to Norway for research. “I look back and I think, ‘wow, if it weren’t for this professor, this program or these employment opportunities, I have no idea where I’d be today,’” she says.

And where is she today? McFadden’s Pomona experience’s helped her to land a prestigious Watson Fellowship, providing $25,000 for her to pursue a year of independent travel and research overseas. McFadden will be returning to the arctic, where she will visit the four northernmost communities in the world, located in Canada, Greenland, Norway and Russia. She’ll travel by plane, train and icebreaker ship as she takes photos documenting life in these extreme climes.

After her Watson fellowship, McFadden plans to work in China for a year before going on to pursue a career in international health law. At least that’s the plan at this point. Pomona has opened up so many possibilities, ignited so many interests. “Some days I’m an ecologist,” she says. “Some days I’m a medical studies person. Some days I’m a culturally-oriented humanities person."