Adventure Racing
2004 Alaska Wilderness Classic 6th Place w/17 year old son (Talkeetnas)
World Championships of Adventure Racing 8th place (Newfoundland)
2003 Designed course Alaska Wilderness Classic (Talkeetnas)
2002 Alaska Wilderness Classic 1st Place, record (Wrangell St. Elias)
Primal Quest (Telluride, CO)
Eco-Challenge (Fiji)
2001 Eco-Challenge 4th place (New Zealand)
Alaska Wilderness Classic 2nd Place (Wrangell St. Elias)
Designed course for 2001 Armed Forces Eco-Challenge (Alaska)
2000 Designed course for 2000 Armed Forces Eco-Challenge (Alaska)
1999 Eco-Challenge 9th Place finish (Argentina)
Designed course for Beast of the East Alaska (canceled)
1998 Raid Gauloise 24th Place finish (Ecuador)
1997 Eco-Challenge 8th Place (First American) finish (Australia)
Alaska Wilderness Classic 3rd Place finish (Kenai Peninsula)
Dyea to Dawson 7th Place Finish (Yukon)
1996 Eco-Challenge 2nd Place (First American) finish (British Columbia)
X-Games Adventure Race (New England)
1995 Alaska Wilderness Classic 4th Place (Alaska Range)
Iditasport 3rd Place Snowshoe division (Alaska)
1993 Alaska Wilderness Classic 4th Place (Brooks Range)
1989 Iditasport 2nd Place Mountain Bike and Overall (Alaska)
1988 Alaska Wilderness Classic 1st Place, record (Wrangell St. Elias)
Alaska Wilderness Ski Classic 1st Place, record (Alaska Range)
Iditasport 4th Place Mountain Bike and Overall (Alaska)
1987 Alaska Wilderness Ski Classic 2nd Place (Chugach Range)
1986 Alaska Wilderness Classic 2nd Place (Alaska Range)
1985 Iditaski 7th Place (Alaska)
1984 Alaska Wilderness Classic 2nd Place (Kenai Peninsula)
1982, 1983 Alaska Wilderness Classic 1st Place, record (Kenai Peninsula)
Hell Biking
2004 “Eureka to Talkeetna” 160 miles w/17 year old son
1998 100 mile bike + 100 mile raft traverse of Talkeetna Mountains
1996 800 mile traverse of the Alaska Range (National Geographic)
1995 150 mile traverse of Harding Icefield and Kenai Peninsula (Bicycling)
100 mile traverse of the Chugach Mountains
1994 100 mile traverse of the Western Alaska Range (Mountain Bike)
1993 50 mile historic trip to “The Bus” (Into the Wild) with Jon
Krakauer
1991 100 mile loop through Canyonlands NP (Utah) with Bill Hatcher
1990 200 mile traverse of Brooks Range (Mountain Bike; Mountain Bike UK)
1989 250 mile traverse of Eastern and Central Alaska Range (Mountain Bike)
1988 150 mile traverse of Wrangell St. Elias (Mountain Bike; Mountain Bike UK)
Pack Rafting and Glacier Skating
2004 “Hula-Hop” 135 miles, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
“Flower Power” 60 miles Girdwood-Knik, Chugach Mtns. w/University
class
2003 “Arctic Circle” 110 miles Arrigetch-Noatak-Alatna Rivers, Brooks
Range
“Charley-Yukon”, 200 miles with 16 year old son and 12 year old
“Eureka to Talkeetna” 160 miles w/University class
Ship Creek Canyon, class IV, first descent in packraft
Talkeetna River, class IV, first descent in packraft
Six-Mile, class V, first descent in packraft
Little Susitna, , class IV, first descent in packraft
2002 Franklin River, class IV, Tasmania Australia, solo
2001 75 mile loop Harding Icefield w/14 year old son & 12 year old daughter
2000 50 mile trip across Harding Icefield and Kenai Peninsula w/13 year old
son
140 mile trip across Wrangell St. Elias w/University class (40 miles no map)
1998 100 mile trip across Kenai Peninsula w/University class
40 mile trip across Arctic Refuge coastal plane w/11 and 9 year old kids
100 mile trip across Kenai Peninsula w/Dr. Tim Laman (40 miles no map)
1994 75 mile pack, raft, and ski from Denali to Talkeetna
100 mile trip in Western Brooks Range w/Jon Krakauer (Smithsonian)
1993 60 mile traverse of Umnak Island (Aleutians) w/6 year old son
1990 125 mile traverse of Talkeetna Mountains
1989 300 mile traverse of Western Alaska Range
Grand Canyon, Whitmore Wash to Diamond Creek, w/mtn bikes
1988 200 mile trip on Charlie Yukon River system
1987 120 mile ski traverse of White Mountains
1986 900 mile traverse of Brooks Range from Canada to Kotzebue
150 mile solo traverse of Wrangell St. Elias
150 mile ski traverse of Central Alaska Range w/Audun Endestadt
Significant Alaskan Climbing
1994 1st ascent “Even Hookers Get the Blues,” Water Ice VI, Chugach
1992 1st ascent “Blow Hard” and “Dirt Ball,” Mixed 4,
Valdez
1987 1st ascent “Broken Dreams” and “Star Babies,” Water
Ice VI, Wrangells
3rd ascent “Love’s Way,” Water Ice VI, Valdez
1986 Solo ascent Doonerak, Brooks Range
First 1 day ascent of “Keystone Greensteps” and “Bridal Veil,”
WI V, Valdez
1985 First solo “Keystone Greensteps,” Water Ice V, Valdez
1st ascent “Cream Stone Fear Step” (aka “Roman’s Candle”),
WI VI, Valdez
2nd ascent “Tortilla Flat,” WI V, Valdez
1st ascent “Vug Tor,” Grade IV, 5.9, Kitchatna Spires
1st ascent East Face McGuiness Peak, Grade V, WI V, Alaska Range
1984 Rescue of Carl Tobin from Peak 9448, Alaska Range
1st ascent Southeast Ridge, Hess Mountain, Grade V, Alaska Range
1st ascent “Pump Master,” 5.10, Interior Alaska
1st ascent “Third World,” Water Ice IV, 5.9, Alaska Range
1st ascent “Raw Ivory,” Water Ice V-, Valdez.
1983 1st ascent of “Big Brother,” Water Ice V, Valdez
2nd ascent “Wowie Zowie,” Water Ice VI, Valdez
1982 1st ascent of “Dire Straights,” Water Ice V-, Valdez
New route on West Face Mt. Deborah, Grade IV, Alaska Range
1st ascent “Broken Rope,” 5.11, Interior Alaska
1981 1st ascent of “Glass Onion,” Water Ice V-, Valdez
1980 1st ascent Northeast Face, Peak Ten-Nine-Ten, Grade V, Alaska Range
1979 1st ascent Southeast Buttress Badile, 5.10, A3, Arrigetch Peaks, Brooks
Range
2nd ascent West Ridge Shot Tower, 5.9, A3, Arrigetch Peaks, Brooks Range
1978 3rd ascent “Bridal Veil Falls,” Water Ice V, Valdez
Roman Dial
Resident of Alaska since 1977
Born in Seattle 1960; Married to Peggy 1985
Father to C. Roman (1987) and Jazz (1989)
Academic Positions
Professor (2004-present), Alaska Pacific University
Department of Environmental Science, Chair (1998-2001)
Associate Professor (1998-2003), Alaska Pacific University
Assistant Professor (1992-1997), Alaska Pacific University
Visiting Assistant Professor (1993, 1994) Stanford University
Education
Ph.D. Stanford University, Biological Sciences 1992
M.S. University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Mathematics, 1986
B.S. University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Mathematics, 1982
B.S. University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Biology, 1982
Virginia Governor’s School for the Gifted 1976
Personal Essay
Wild nature has always appealed. As a kid, spending weekends on my grandmother’s
farm or afternoons in the last wooded fragments inside DC’s Beltway, I
chased lizards and snakes, turtles and salamanders. A summer spent with wild
uncles in the Alaska Range at age 9 changed me forever and I soon took up the
adventure sports. At 16 I left Virginia for college in Alaska.
Alaska’s long winters make ice climbing more attractive than rock climbing,
so I soon took to ice. I wanted to visit ranges Dave Roberts described in the
American Alpine Journal; shoot photos like Galen Rowell; climb like Yvon Chouinard.
But I soon discovered that there was more to mountains than summits. I discovered
friendships and landscapes that molded me. I discovered that a climber’s
attitudes worked beyond the glacial ranges. Wilderness racing – what I
once wrote to Outside Magazine as a “free-form adventure race” in
1985 – captured my attention in the early 80’s. I also met a young
girl who had never climbed a mountain, never owned a bike, never learned to
swim, nor even camped more than a car’s length from the road. She became
my lifelong companion for travel across wildlands worldwide.
Landscape traverses with novel approaches – no trails, pack rafts, tents
without floors, cross-country racing skis – accompanied by someone with
no pre-defined notions of what was proper -- substituted for a waning interest
in big mountain climbs. Then the advent of the mountain bike became a tool for
exploring the improbable, culminating in a trip for the Geographic. Family responsibilities
sent me back to school to rekindle and formalize my interest in nature. My Ph.D.
concerned the ecological interactions in the rainforest canopy where I performed
manipulative experiments on the organisms found there. Nine months in the canopy
opened up a new realm of possibilities and the opportunity to blend my love
for travel with adventure, natural history, and novel movement.
My sabbatical year allowed for the ultimate canopy trek: moving from tree to
tree for one week, never coming down until. We developed the technology -- “magic
missiles” and “spruce gooses,” lanyards and jugs – and
we had two destination: the jungles of Borneo, home of the world’s largest
arboreal animal, the Orang-utan and the tallest hardwoods in the world, Australia’s
Eucalyptus regnans forests in Victoria and Tasmania.