Page 18: of Marine Technology Magazine (January 2007)
Seafloor Engineering
Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of January 2007 Marine Technology Magazine
18 MTR January 2007
Four researchers have been recognized by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) for their contributions to ocean sciences research and engineering. All will receive funding provided by the endowed awards to support their research over peri- ods of three to five years. The awards are effective January 1, 2007.
Three of the researchers have been named recipients of endowed senior scientist chairs that provide financial support for five years, allowing the recipient the freedom to pur- sue a variety of career interests. One investi- gator received a technical staff award that provides support over three years.
Dr. Wayne Rockwell "Rocky" Geyer, recipient of the Mary Sears Chair for
Excellence in Oceanography, received a bachelor's degree in geology from
Dartmouth College in 1977 and M.S. and
Ph.D. degrees in physical oceanography from the University of Washington in 1981 and 1985, respectively. He joined the
WHOI staff in 1985 as a postdoctoral scholar in the Applied Ocean Physics and
Engineering Department, spent another year as a postdoctoral investigator, and was appointed assistant scientist in 1987. Geyer was promoted to associate scientist in 1991 and to senior scientist in 2001.
Rocky Geyer served as director of the
Institution's Rinehart Coastal Research
Center from 1996 to 2001 and was chair of the Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering
Department from 2001 to 2005. Geyer's research has centered on estuarine and coastal transport processes, sediment trans- port, and numerical modeling of estuaries and river plumes. He has conducted proj- ects in the Hudson River in New York, looking at sediment contamination from
PCBs from electrical companies on the river, and the Eel River in California, where flooding has carried large amounts of sedi- ment into coastal areas. More recently he has conducted experiments in the
Merrimack River in Massachusetts, study- ing the interaction between fresh and salt water and the ability of a river to disperse material into the Gulf of Maine.
The Sears chair is named for Dr. Mary
Sears, one of the first staff members of the
Institution and a guiding force in its devel- opment. A biologist, she also served as clerk of the Institution's corporation for many years and was a major presence in uniting the international oceanographic communi- ty. She passed away in 1997 at the age of 92.
Dr. Scott Doney, recipient of the W. Van
Alan Clark, Sr. Chair for Excellence in
Oceanography, is a senior scientist in the
Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry
Department. He received a bachelor's degree in chemistry from Revelle College at the University of California, San Diego in 1986 and a Ph.D. in chemical oceanogra- phy in 1991 from the MIT/WHOI Joint
Graduate Program. He returned to WHOI in 2002 following eleven years in the
Advanced Study Program and Climate and
Global Dynamics Division at the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, CO.
Doney was a Fellow of the Institution's
Ocean and Climate Change Institute from 2003 to 2005 and serves as co-chair of the
Biogeochemistry Working Group of the
Community Climate System Model. He was chair and editor of Ocean Carbon and
Climate Change: An Implementation
Strategy for U.S. Ocean Carbon Research, released in 2004. His research interests include the global carbon cycle, marine bio- geochemistry and ecosystem dynamics, large-scale ocean circulation and tracers, and air-sea gas exchange.
Dr. W. Brechner Owens, recipient of the
W. Van Alan Clark, Jr. Chair for Excellence in Oceanography, is a senior scientist in the
Physical Oceanography Department. He
Science news
WHOI Researchers Recognized
MTR#1 (17-32).qxd 1/11/2007 3:53 PM Page 18