Item talk:Q48358: Difference between revisions

From geokb
(Updated person data cache with ORCID information)
(Updated item talk page content)
Line 86: Line 86:
usgs_staff_profile:
usgs_staff_profile:
   meta:
   meta:
    url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/david-oleary
    timestamp: '2024-01-30T18:49:45.499988'
     status_code: 200
     status_code: 200
    timestamp: '2023-09-30T16:49:35.137198'
    url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/david-oleary
   profile:
   profile:
     abstracts: []
     name: David O'Leary
     affiliations: []
    name_qualifier: null
    titles:
    - Center Director
    organizations:
    - !!python/tuple
      - Utah Water Science Center
      - https://www.usgs.gov/centers/utah-water-science-center
    email: doleary@usgs.gov
    orcid: 0000-0001-9888-1739
    intro_statements:
    - David is the director of the USGS Utah Water Science Center.
    expertise_terms: []
     professional_experience: []
     education:
     education:
     - B.S. Geology, Colorado State University
     - B.S. Geology, Colorado State University
     - M.S. Hydrology, San Diego State University
     - M.S. Hydrology, San Diego State University
     email: doleary@usgs.gov
     affiliations: []
    expertise_terms: []
     honors: []
     honors: []
     intro_statements:
     abstracts: []
    - David is the director of the USGS Utah Water Science Center.
    name: David O'Leary
    name_qualifier: null
    orcid: 0000-0001-9888-1739
    organization_link: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/utah-water-science-center
    organization_name: Utah Water Science Center
     personal_statement: Previously David served as Investigative Section Studies Chief
     personal_statement: Previously David served as Investigative Section Studies Chief
       of the USGS Utah Water Science Center, a Studies Chief with the USGS California
       of the USGS Utah Water Science Center, a Studies Chief with the USGS California
Line 112: Line 117:
       to natural and artificial recharge processes in desert environments and chloride
       to natural and artificial recharge processes in desert environments and chloride
       intrusion in deltaic systems. He has been with the USGS since 2006.
       intrusion in deltaic systems. He has been with the USGS since 2006.
    professional_experience: []
    title: Center Director

Revision as of 01:49, 31 January 2024

orcid:

 meta:
   status_code: 200
   timestamp: '2023-10-20T09:24:54.343428'
   url: https://pub.orcid.org/v3.0/0000-0001-9888-1739/record
 orcid:
   activities:
     employments:
       affiliation-group:
       - external-ids:
           external-id: []
         last-modified-date:
           value: 1564176856352
         summaries:
         - employment-summary:
             created-date:
               value: 1457463140609
             department-name: U.S. Geological Survey
             display-index: '1'
             end-date: null
             external-ids: null
             last-modified-date:
               value: 1564176856352
             organization:
               address:
                 city: Salt Lake City
                 country: US
                 region: UT
               disambiguated-organization:
                 disambiguated-organization-identifier: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000201
                 disambiguation-source: FUNDREF
               name: U.S. Department of the Interior
             path: /0000-0001-9888-1739/employment/1631458
             put-code: 1631458
             role-title: Hydrologist
             source:
               assertion-origin-client-id: null
               assertion-origin-name: null
               assertion-origin-orcid: null
               source-client-id: null
               source-name:
                 value: David O'Leary
               source-orcid:
                 host: orcid.org
                 path: 0000-0001-9888-1739
                 uri: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9888-1739
             start-date:
               day:
                 value: '01'
               month:
                 value: '10'
               year:
                 value: '2006'
             url:
               value: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/ut-water
             visibility: public
       last-modified-date:
         value: 1564176856352
       path: /0000-0001-9888-1739/employments
   history:
     claimed: true
     completion-date: null
     creation-method: DIRECT
     deactivation-date: null
     last-modified-date:
       value: 1659369463335
     source: null
     submission-date:
       value: 1457463023315
     verified-email: true
     verified-primary-email: true
   person:
     name:
       created-date:
         value: 1460756410550
       credit-name: null
       family-name:
         value: O'Leary
       given-names:
         value: David
       last-modified-date:
         value: 1460756410550
       path: 0000-0001-9888-1739
       source: null
       visibility: public

usgs_staff_profile:

 meta:
   url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/david-oleary
   timestamp: '2024-01-30T18:49:45.499988'
   status_code: 200
 profile:
   name: David O'Leary
   name_qualifier: null
   titles:
   - Center Director
   organizations:
   - !!python/tuple
     - Utah Water Science Center
     - https://www.usgs.gov/centers/utah-water-science-center
   email: doleary@usgs.gov
   orcid: 0000-0001-9888-1739
   intro_statements:
   - David is the director of the USGS Utah Water Science Center.
   expertise_terms: []
   professional_experience: []
   education:
   - B.S. Geology, Colorado State University
   - M.S. Hydrology, San Diego State University
   affiliations: []
   honors: []
   abstracts: []
   personal_statement: Previously David served as Investigative Section Studies Chief
     of the USGS Utah Water Science Center, a Studies Chief with the USGS California
     Water Science Center, and a project hydrologist with the USGS California Water
     Science Center. David's studies have focused on understanding the physical and
     geochemical hydrology of desert and coastal aquifer systems including work related
     to natural and artificial recharge processes in desert environments and chloride
     intrusion in deltaic systems. He has been with the USGS since 2006.