Marine Chemistry & Geochemistry
Research activities in the Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry (MC&G) Department are focused on exploring the broad spectrum of processes that influence chemical cycling and transformations in the oceans and the ocean’s interactions with the atmosphere, land, and Earth’s interior. Critical to these efforts are considerations of how ocean chemistry influences and responds to biological activity, physical forcings, and the impact of anthropogenic activity on the marine environment. We are a diverse group of researchers working at the interface of multiple disciplines using a combination of laboratory, field-based, and computational approaches. Projects range in size from single investigator studies to large collaborative projects involving investigators from multiple institutions.
After WHOI established the Department of Chemistry and Geology in 1963, the Department of Chemistry became an independent entity in 1967 under the leadership of John Meacham Hunt. In 1992, under the leadership of Geoffrey Thompson, it was renamed the Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry.
The Department consists of about 28 Ph.D. level active Scientific Staff, about 33 Technical Staff (many of whom hold Ph.D. degrees), between 10 and 15 postdoctoral scientists, five administrators, and between 20 and 25 graduate students who are enrolled in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Sciences and Engineering.
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See Also
The Humpback Microbiome - XX Files
Amy Apprill of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution studies the tiny microbial hitchhikers that tag along as the humpback whale makes its way across the globe.
More Fukushima radiation near West Coast, scientists say - USA Today
Highlights the work of MCG Senior Scientist Ken Buesseler.