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Interdisciplinary Marine
Science: Dr. Robert F. Anderson
of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
of Columbia University, for his
innovative contributions in the fields of
biochemical cycles, ocean sedimentation
and climate variability, through his
development and use of pioneering
radioisotope tracers and his scientific
leadership in multidisciplinary programs.
Dr. Anderson is a Senior Scholar and
the Associate Director for Geochemistry
at the Lamont-Doherty Observatory in
Palisades, New York, and an Adjunct
Professor of Columbia University. He
holds a B.Sc. in Chemistry / Oceanography
from the University of Washington, and a
Ph.D. in Oceanography from the Joint
Program of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution. Dr. Anderson
has recently received the Director's
Award for Research Excellence and the
Annual Mentoring Award from the
Lamont-Doherty Observatory.
Dr. Anderson has done pioneering work
in the use of several radioisotopes for
understanding ocean biogeochemical cycles
and sedimentary processes, and for
inferring their role in past climate
variability in particular. Using uranium
series and other isotopes, he established
past particle-scavenging rates and
processes in the ocean, and used this
information to reconstruct how the rain
of biogenic material to the seabed has
varied with climate change. He pioneered
the use of uranium as a tracer for the
level of anoxia in marine sediments, and
has used its concentrations in historical
sediments to infer the ocean's
reduction-oxidation state and estimate
biological productivity during past
climate states. His work has shown that
biological productivity in the Southern
Ocean during the last glacial maximum was
much higher than present-day pelagic
productivity, and has led to important
discoveries about the role of
productivity changes in mediating
atmospheric CO2 levels. Dr. Anderson has
been highly influential in mentoring
young scientists, leading the Joint
Global Ocean Flux Study in the Southern
Ocean, and now leading the planning of
GEOTRACES, an international effort to
determine the marine biogeochemical
cycles of trace elements and their
isotopes on a global scale.
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