| ABOUT GEOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY
The
geological oceanography faculty and graduate students conduct research
from the continental margins to the deep ocean seafloor extending
in time from modern environments to millions of years back in earth's
history to understand and predict earth surface and interior processes.
Primary research themes include: (1) paleoceanography and paleoclimatology
from analyzing deep-sea cores and shallow-water corals, (2) coastline
and continental shelf development and processes including effects
of storms and sea-level fluctuations, (3) the health of modern and
recent geologic history of coral reefs and carbonate depositional
environments, (4) anthropogenic influences on estuaries, (5)
mathematical explanations of geologic phenomena, and (6)
plate tectonics. The faculty are
engaged in numerous other related themes.
Participation in scientific ocean drilling through the past Ocean
Drilling Program (ODP) and its successor the Integrated Ocean Drilling
Program (IODP) is a central activity for the geological group. Our
faculty have sailed on numerous legs to far away sites and continue
to serve on major advisory panels to this major, multi-decadal,
international scientific program. Although we have projects and
interests in all of the earth's oceans, we pay particular attention
to Florida's marine geology including regional geologic history,
rivers and estuaries, barrier islands and marsh coastlines, continental
shelf-coastline linkages, and relic and modern coral reefs.
Collectively, the geological oceanography group has modern, well-equipped
laboratories that include light isotope mass spectrometers, an x-ray
diffraction unit, core and sediment analytical capability with sedigraph,
coulometer, digital core photography, a wax modeling facility, microfossil
analysis, and foram culturing. Equally as important, the geological
group has one of he best seafloor mapping capabilities in the US
including high-resolution swath bathymetry (multibeam), high-resolution
seismic reflection (boomer and chirp) and side-scan sonar profiling,
a fully instrumented ROV capable of working in 200 m water depths,
and fully instrumented quadrapods capable of measuring multiple
environmentalvariables in the nearshore and shelf environments.
Fully integrated with these field instruments is the computational
capability to generate state-of-the art data depictions and imagery.
The geology faculty, staff, and students have access to the full
array of technology within the CMS including the scanning electron
microscope, transmission electron microscope, ICP-MS, satellite
oceanography imagery, and other technical and engineering support
capability. Finally, our group works closely with scientists from
the US Geological Survey's Center for Coastal and Watershed Studies-a
major federal laboratory located on our campus.
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