Research   >   by Theme

Research Themes

Biogeochemical Cycles and Life in the Oceans

In the oceans, physical forcing (solar input) drives the distribution and chemical composition of water masses which strongly influence biological productivity. Reciprocally, oceanic biota affect the physical and chemical properties of seawater. EOS research in biogeochemistry seeks to understand the interactions between ocean physics, chemistry and biology, by integrating our strengths in each of these sub-disciplines.
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Researchers
Allen, Susan Calvert, Steve DiBacco, Claudio Francois, Roger
Healey, Michael Maldonado, Maria Orians, Kristin Pakhomov, Evgeny
Suttle, Curtis Taylor, F.J.R. (Max) Tortell, Philippe Weis, Dominique

Crustal and Mantle Dynamics

Much of the research undertaken by EOS solid earth scientists is encompassed by the themes: (i) the assembly and deformation of continental lithosphere, and (ii) the origins and evolution of magmas and fluids within the crust and upper mantle. These themes are investigated through a range of petrological, geochemical and geophysical research programs that exploit theory, laboratory experiments and field studies conducted over a broad range of spatial and temporal scales. Most recently, we have expanded our expertise and our research focus to begin to ask fundamental questions concerning the physical and chemical evolution of condensed planetary bodies.
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Researchers
Bostock, Michael Clowes, Ron Dipple, Greg Hearn, Elizabeth
Herrmann, Felix Jellinek, Mark Kennedy, Lori Kopylova, Maya
Mortensen, James Russell, Kelly Scoates, James Weis, Dominique

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics (GFD) is a theme that permeates all the EOS research communities, applying to media as diverse as air, water, ice, mud, magma and rocks, and spanning a huge range of time scales.
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Researchers
Allen, Susan Balmforth, Neil Beckie, Roger Clarke, Garry
Herrmann, Felix Hsieh, William Hungr, Oldrich Jellinek, Mark
Pawlowicz, Richard Pandolfo, Lionel Smith, Leslie Steyn, Douw
Stull, Roland

Global Environmental Change

The geologic record and a knowledge of Earth's physical, chemical and biological processes provide a framework for EOS scientists to contemplate the dawning of the Anthropocene epoch. Change is a quintessential feature of Earth history and large changes are commonly associated with massive disruptions of the biosphere. During the Neoproterozoic period, a catastrophic breakdown of the thermostat that regulates the balance of atmospheric carbon dioxide subjected Earth to at least two cycles of near-total glaciation. In the Phanerozoic, the fossil record of mass extinction offers a unique perspective on the biological impact of environmental change at a global scale and points to a fundamental link between plate tectonics, large igneous provinces and atmospheric composition as a driving force in biosphere collapse. Records of Late Cenozoic climate change, archived in polar ice sheets and marine sediments, shed light on the mechanisms of glacial cycles and the packaging of abrupt climate change events within these cycles.
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Researchers
Austin, Phil Bustin, Marc Clarke, Garry Dipple, Greg
Francois, Roger Grimm, Kurt Hsieh, William Ingram, Grant
Orians, Kristin Pandolfo, Lionel Ridgwell, Andrew Smith, Paul
Sutherland, Stuart Suttle, Curtis

Resources, Hazards, and Environmental Quality

EOS takes seriously its contributions to societal well-being and the economy. We are innovators in exploring for a broad spectrum of resources including minerals and hydrocarbons from the solid Earth, and drugs derived from the Oceans. British Columbia is a mountainous, seismically active terrain subject to volcanic activity, mass wasting and extreme weather conditions. We must also be aware of the environmental pressures that result from resource exploitation and a steadily increasing population. The Province looks to its premier University as a source of scientific information and engineering expertise relevant to all these phenomena but we will also continue to apply our research results on a global scale. We are proud of our close relationships with industry and the important Industry-University research consortia that we have fostered.
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Researchers
Andersen, Ray Beckie, Roger Bevier, Mary Lou Bostock, Michael
Bustin, Marc Clowes, Ron Dipple, Greg Eberhardt, Erik
Groat, Lee Hungr, Oldrich Hearn, Elizabeth Herrmann, Felix
Kopylova, Maya Mayer, Ulrich Mortensen, James Oldenburg, Douglas
Raudsepp, Mati Rowins, Steve Russell, Kelly Scoates, James
Smith, Leslie Steyn, Douw Stull, Roland Tosdal, Richard
Ulrych, Tad Weis, Dominique

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