By Drew Fulton on November 8th, 2009

Debris field after Hurricane Ike - Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge, Anahuac, Texas
With the prospect of a late season hurricane hitting the Gulf Coast later this week, I wanted to post some images from a project I worked on this time last year. In October 2008, Hurricane Ike slammed into the Texas coast, devastating coastal communities near Houston from Galveston to Sabine Pass and produced significant damage inland as well. The media was inundated with photographs and video of the damage to the coastal towns, but there was very little focus on the natural areas of the coast. That is where I found my niche…
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By Drew Fulton on October 23rd, 2009
I’d like to take a minute to share a little about the project I worked on all last summer, the Kizilburun shipwreck excavation. My wife and I spent the summer living in a remote camp on the coast of Turkey as part of a team excavating a shipwreck over 2,000 years old. This really is a project my wife has worked on for a couple years now but this summer I was able to join the excavation as a photographer.
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By Drew Fulton on September 30th, 2009
I am excited to announce that last week the National Geographic Society featured my project Canopy in the Clouds on their BlogWILD blog. For the past two years I have been working with ecologist, Greg Goldsmith, and cinematographer, Colin Witherill, to create ground breaking educational media for middle and high school science classrooms. We have created a series of interactive panoramic images, like the one above, featuring educational hotspot videos. It is kind of hard to explain so please click through to the full site here, Canopy in the Clouds: Education that Starts at the Top.
We will be launching our complete curriculum at the end of the year and I will be posting more details here.