- About
- Research
- Prospective Students
- Current Students
- News & Events
- News
- Events
- News & Kudos Archives
- 2025 Archives
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Negin Shooraj
- SFU Geography Alumni Sean Orr wins Vancouver council seat in byelection
- Rosemary Collard awarded 2024 SFU Excellence in Teaching Award
- SFU Students Designed and Developed a GeoApp as a Living Wage Calculator
- Undergraduate students team secures third-place in Canada-wide GeoApp competition
- SFU Geography Wins Big at 2025 CAG Annual Conference
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Alex Sodeman
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Tintin Yang
- In Memory of Leonard "Len" Evenden, Professor Emeritus
- Gabrielle Wong awarded 2025 Gordon M. Shrum Medal
- Dr. Bright Addae awarded 2025 Graduate Dean's Convocation Medal
- Congratulations to Alysha van Duynhoven for Teaching Assistant Excellence Award
- Wildfires to waterways: SFU Geography grad takes action to protect the environment
- Making a difference on and off-campus: student leader and changemaker, Gabrielle Wong, awarded SFU convocation medal
- 2025 Alumni Newsletter
- Kira Sokolovskaia wins the 2025 SFU ECCE GIS Scholarship Award
- Mapping a path to City Hall: SFU alumnus shares journey to becoming Mayor of New Westminster
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Alysha van Duynhoven
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Hannah Harrison
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Jade Baird
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Ashley Tegart
- Rethinking the World Map: Dr. Shiv Balram featured on CBC
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Véronique Emond-Sioufi
- SFU Geographers at the 2025 International Cartographic Conference in Vancouver
- When academic curiosity meets environmental purpose: new global environmental systems grad builds interdisciplinary foundation at SFU
- Alysha Van Duynhoven wins the 2025 SFU ECCE in GIS Student Associate Achievement Award
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to David Swanlund
- Congratulations to Our 2025 Warren Gill Award Recipients!
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Baharak Yousefi
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Tara Jankovic
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Christine Leclerc
- Thesis Defence - Congratulations to Kira Lamont
- Terri Evans: Researching homelessness in suburban communities
- Mapping change for people and the planet
- GIS Month: What is Geographic Information Science (GIS)?
- SFU GIS undergraduate develops real-time earthquake monitoring and hospital alert system
- Physical Geography student returns to SFU, dives into marine ecology, soils and GIS to map a new path forward
- SFU study searches Strava to reveal secrets to happier runs
- 2025 Archives
- Alumni
- GEOG 162 - Canada
Alumni Spotlight
The Department catches up with Geography graduate Brandon Heung.
Brandon Heung (Grad 2011 & 2017)
I have very fond memories of the (long) time that I spent in the Department of Geography for my BSc (Hons.) in the Physical Geography program (2006-2011) and in the PhD program (2011-2017). During the early years of my undergraduate, I honestly did not know what I would like to specialize in or what my future looked like as a General Science student; however, this all changed when I took the introductory Physical Geography course, which was taught by the late (and great) Dr. Owen Hertzman. Here, Owen transformed our thinking by encouraging us to think about the Earth from a whole-system perspective and helping us understand the interconnectedness between the lithosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and atmosphere, as well as how humans interact with the physical environment. Fun fact: prior to Owen’s tenure at SFU, he helped shaped the Environmental Sciences program at Dalhousie University (where I work)!
Throughout my undergraduate, I was exposed to many different and exciting disciplines—climatology, hydrology, and geomorphology to name a few—however, my heart was always in soil science. Perhaps this had to do with a combination of me loving to dig holes as a youngster and having a great teacher in Dr. Margaret Schmidt. The soil not only sustains humanity by providing us with food and fibre, but it also plays a huge role in mitigating climate change, ensuring water security, and providing a whole host of other vital ecosystem services. In 2009, through the NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Assistant program, I was afforded the opportunity to work in Margaret’s lab during the summer semester, where I developed my skills in carrying out field work and getting my hands dirty. Through a similar internship program in 2010 I was introduced to predictive digital soil mapping—a subdiscipline of soil science that aims to apply quantitative, data-driven approaches towards understanding soil variability over space and time. This area of research was particularly exciting because it was an emerging area of research in Canada, and it integrates techniques in soil science, GIS, remote sensing, and computing—all skills that I developed in the Physical Geography program.
In 2011, I enrolled in the MSc program in the Department of Geography and later transferred to the PhD program in 2013, which I completed in 2017. Here, my PhD was on advancing the use of machine-learning techniques in mapping soil types in the Lower Fraser Valley and the Okanagan-Kamloops Valley. This experience was exciting because Margaret and I, in collaboration with Dr. Chuck Bulmer from the BC Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, were all learning how to do this work. Our provincial soil survey team were really the first in Canada in producing digital soil maps.
Reflecting upon my graduate career, I think the diversity of research interests and projects amongst the graduate students and faculty provided the environment for me to develop into a more well-rounded researcher today (so I would like to think). Sometimes as researchers, we tend to silo ourselves—in particular, between the natural and social sciences. However, this was certainly not the case in the Department of Geography.
Towards the end of my PhD in 2017, I wanted to expand what I have learnt in BC and map soils around the country. To do so, I did a two-week stint at the University of Saskatchewan to apply soil mapping techniques to drone-acquired data to map salt-affected soils to support precision management of agricultural fields. After that, I spent four months as a postdoctoral researcher with the Canadian Forest Service of Natural Resources Canada to map soil types in northern Ontario to support enhanced forest resource inventories. In that same year, I was appointed to a faculty position in the Department of Plant, Food, and Environmental Sciences at the Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University.
At Dalhousie and through my Soil-Landscapes Analysis & Modelling Lab, I am expanding upon my PhD work, where I am now applying machine learning and digital soil mapping techniques to support drone-based precision agriculture, forest resource inventories and ecosystem modelling, soil biodiversity surveys for Atlantic Canada, and the development of national-scale, soil infrastructure. In addition, I have the great fortune of leading the Canadian Digital Soil Mapping Working Group of the Canadian Society of Soil Science, where I get the opportunity to train the next generation of soil surveys. Lastly, I am also very proud to be a continuing contributor to SFU’s Department of Geography as an Adjunct Professor and by supporting graduate students there.
I am very thankful to the Department of Geography. The research excellence and quality of people there were instrumental in shaping my career.