Visionary Manitoba Arctic researcher David Barber dies, leaving 'massive footprint' in field
CBC
Family and friends are mourning the loss of the visionary Arctic researcher and University of Manitoba professor David Barber.
Barber, who was a distinguished professor, the founding director of the Centre for Earth Observation Science and associate dean of research in the faculty of environment, earth and resource, passed away on Friday after suffering complications from cardiac arrest.
Barber, 61, is survived by his wife Lucette, three children and two grandchildren.
He loomed as large in his family as he did in academia, says his eldest son, Jeremy Barber.
"I think the outward facing piece that people may know of him as sort of being the Arctic guy was just a piece of the entire man that he was, but it was very symbolic of what he was in the rest of his life," Jeremy said in an interview with CBC News.
"He was a very fiercely passionate man and a very loyal father, husband and family member."
David, who was a Canada Research Chair in Arctic system science and climate change, was very intentional about including his family in his work, Jeremy said.
"In 1999, I went up to a remote camp with him a two-hour helicopter ride north of Resolute Bay and just lived that life with him. And he did that for my entire life," he said.
"I don't know how he managed to get a nine-year-old kid onto an ice cap, but it was it was something that I'm very grateful for, something that very much positioned who myself and my siblings are as people."
U of M climatologist Tim Papakyriakou also spent a lot of time with Barber in the High Arctic — sometimes even in tents on the sea ice.
"He was the guy that you'd want to be with if things went sideways. He was a very, very clever individual, very intuitive, a very big man, too…. So when you get your snowmobile stuck or something else happens, yeah, you want to have Dave beside you," Papakyriakou said.
Papakyriakou says Barber left a "massive footprint" on Arctic research, locally, nationally and internationally.
Barber was instrumental in the development of many large international multidisciplinary networks, and helped secure major Arctic research infrastructure.
"He came back to the University of Manitoba because he wanted to make a contribution here. He was a super proud Manitoban, super proud Canadians and loved the Arctic. He worked tirelessly to put Canada back on the map in Arctic research, and he did do that," he said.