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An Introduction
The Charles Paleoceanography Group at SIO uses the
geological archives of recent climate change and carbon cycling to
address several prominent issues of "global change": How sensitive is
the Earth's climate system to disturbance? Is there a relationship
between the variability of climate and the average state of climate?
What are the principal mechanisms for instability in both cold and warm
climates? I am interested in any medium that registers and preserves a
climate signal, but the group mainly uses a few analytical tools
(primarily, the stable isotopes of oxygen, carbon and nitrogen) to
reconstruct climate variability on timescales ranging from ice age
cycles to interannual fluctuations. Students (and post-docs) in the lab
are encouraged to develop and carry out their own projects (click on
their individual links for more information), making full use of the
diverse resources available at SIO.
One steady theme for the group has been the coral
record of interannual climate variability. In the mid 1990's we spent a
number of years exploiting the record from living corals and sponges.
After this initial period of exploration, we have since moved on to
fossil material that spans greater intervals of time, and graduate
student Kim Cobb made this material the subject of her doctoral
dissertation (completed in 2002). After Kim graduated, she and I have
further developed the record of fossil coral from the Line Islands
(Central Pacific), and we are aiming to arrive at a continuous
reconstruction of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation phenomenon,
at monthly resolution, for at least the last 1100 years. Looking ahead,
I am trying to work along analogous lines to investigate the coupling
between the Indian Ocean and the South Asian monsoon throughout the
Holocene, again making use of fossil coral material from various atolls
throughout the Indian Ocean .
Another current theme is the deep sea sediment record
of the ocean's large scale overturning circulation. This circulation
has often been implicated in the abrupt climate changes that punctuated
the late Pleistocene epoch, but the explanations for these dramatic
climate events will remain largely speculative until there is a
legitimate picture of "what happened when" in the deep ocean. Current
student Jenna Munson's work with the radiocarbon record of the deep
South Atlantic, we hope, will constitute as yet the most complete
vertical profile of the influence of Antarctic Intermediate Water and
North Atlantic Deep Water over the last deglaciation. Inspired by Ralph
Keeling's theoretical arguments, Jenna's work grew out of my long
standing collaboration with Niall Slowey at Texas A+M. She is analyzing
a suite of cores collected on our joint cruise in 2003.
Another theme that has carried through from my
dissertation work involves the cycling of carbon over the Pleistocene
ice ages. The mystery of what caused the large natural,
glacial-interglacial fluctuations of atmospheric carbon dioxide has
endured for over 20 years, but if the enigma could be solved, this
advance would lead directly to a refined assessment of how (and at what
rate) the ocean might soak up anthropogenic CO2. Our lab's
contributions, along with various collaborators, have essentially dealt
with the timing of Southern Ocean record of nutrient cycling and the
biological pump of carbon. The basic principle is that all the
different proposed mechanisms for reducing atmospheric CO2 during the
ice ages make unique predictions for the sequence of events in the
ocean/atmosphere system. The general problem has been especially
difficult to "nail" for various reasons, and there are still plenty of
discoveries to be made! Current activities include collaboration with
Professor Devendra Lal on the trace metal signature of marine diatoms.
Also, graduate student Patrick Rafter is attempting to disentangle the
various imprints on the marine nitrogen isotope budget of the
equatorial Pacific.
Finally, a significant fraction of my own published
work falls in the category of general Southern Ocean paleoceanography.
This work reflects my collaboration with David Hodell at the University
of Florida and former SIO graduate students Graham Mortyn and Ule
Ninnemann. My group's papers essentially describe the series of
observations that arose from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 177. The main
strategy behind this drilling campaign was to collect a transect of
sedimentary sequences from sites spanning the potential latitudinal
excursions of the frontal boundaries and seasonal sea ice cover. As a
result of these efforts, the sediments collected yield constraints on
the dynamics of the surface Southern Ocean over a variety of
timescales. We are not finished mining these sequences for various
purposes, but, along with a host of other collaborators, we have
already started looking ahead to the more challenging prospect of
acquiring analogous sequences from the Pacific sector of the Southern
Ocean (perhaps by 2008).
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Charles Lab News
April 2008
The ESYS 10 class is over,
but there was no Spring Break for the Charles Lab. After grading the
final exams from ESYS 10, Patrick prepared to give a talk at USC and
Chris prepared for his next class--Paleoclimatology (a graduate student
level class at SIO).
In other news, we just
noticed that Lydia Roach's upcoming cruise to the Santa Barbara Basin
is on the UNOLS website and here's a screen grab and link of it:

March 2008
Chris and Patrick are
still immersed in their ESYS 10 class, Patrick continues his months of
work analyzing sediment N isotopes (slow going, but good data!). Lydia
travels to Minnesota this month with her newest Swamp Lake sediment
cores. However, the most important event in the Charles lab this month
was Jenna's defense! Here are some photos:

Jenna and her committee
Jenna waits, while Chris introduces her
February 2008
Chris is teaching
Introduction to Environmental Systems (ESYS 10) this quarter and
Patrick is TA'ing. Jenna is finishing up her thesis and getting ready
to defend next month. Lydia takes a trip to Cal Tech to measure H
isotopes in her Swamp Lake cores and Danny is culturing diatoms and
running coral samples on our mass spectrometer.
January 2008
There is a lot going on in
the Charles Lab this quarter--Chris is teaching ESYS 10 (Intro. to
Environmental Systems) and Patrick is the teacher's assistant. To find
the syllabus, click here (or over to the left).
Here's a nice photo of the science party from the last cruise (missing Arjan and Peter):

December 2007
Lydia is giving a talk at
the fall AGU meeting in San Francisco. Everyone else continues with
their own work at home and we finally receive the sediment cores from
the last cruise!
October/November 2007
The Charles Lab is out to
sea! We are in the middle of the Indian Ocean--our objective is to
retrieve fossil coral from the outer Seychelles Bank. Read the whole
story here.
September 2007
We've just experienced a
major heat wave in southern California, but today it feels like autumn
is just around the corner and technically speaking, it is approaching
quickly.
The Charles lab is very,
very busy in the upcoming months. Chris is travelling around the world
and preparing for our research cruise this October in the Arabian Sea.
Meanwhile, Lydia has a second expedition to Yosemite National Park.
Patrick is also getting married.
Here's a photo from last year's Yosemite expedition:
July 2007
Summertime here at SIO is
somewhat quiet with many groups out to sea or out in the field. The
Charles lab's upcoming cruise isn't until this fall, so we've been busy
working in the lab or writing, writing, writing.
May 2007
As we are approaching the
summer, we are all busy in the Charles lab. Lydia is creating thin
sections from her Swamp Lake freeze cores, Jenna is beginning to write
her thesis, Patrick is running sediment samples for N isotopes here at
SIO, and Danny is culturing diatoms! A very diverse group.
January 2007(update)
New photos from Chris' pursuit of Porites coral in Sri Lanka:

Discussing the coral

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We also just received some older images (from 2005) of former Charles Lab student Kim Cobb drilling coral underwater:

Kim taking a break from drilling

Kim drilling and Jordan watching
January 2007
A new year for the Charles
Lab and like the last, it's a busy one. Chris will be teaching a class
entitled Introduction to Environmental Systems (ESYS 10) this quarter
(link here).
December 2006
For Earth Scientists,
December means the American Geophysical Union's Fall Conference in San
Francisco. Most of the Charles Lab was in attendance and Jenna was
presenting her research. Jenna's talk was great and afterward she
fielded several good questions.
October /November 2006
The Roach Yosemite
Expedition went off without any problems (except for some blisters due
to lots of hiking). Here's some photos for your enjoyment:

The Expedition Group on the luxurious R/V Roach
The object of their desire--the FREEZE CORE!
I'm sorry to say that I forgot to put up a photo of Danny Richter growing his diatoms for the last update--here it is:
August / September 2006
It was busy couple of
months for the Charles Lab. Danny was culturing diatoms (they are doing
much better than the plants in the lab), Jenna and Lydia flew off to
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to analyze foraminifera for
radiocarbon, and Patrick flew to Princeton, New Jersey to analyze the
Nitrogen isotopic composition of Nitrate in the equatorial Pacific (at
the Sigman lab). Danny did not get to fly off to anywhere exotic like
Patrick, but he has a lot to do back here at SIO--he organized the new
student welcome party on the SIO pier and he is helping to organize the
SIO Geology, Geochemistry, and Marine Chemistry Seminars.
Patrick and Lydia also drove to Flagstaff, AZ where they saw plenty of cactus:
Next month (October) will
see the Lydia Roach Scientific Expedition to Swamp Lake (in Yosemite
National Park). Stay tuned for many pictures!
June/July 2006 (updated)
Well, the newest member of
the Charles Paleoceanography Group just finished his first year of
graduate school--here is Daniel Richter:
Congratulations Danny! Expect a biography from him soon (now that he has no more excuses!).
June 2006
It's summer time in La
Jolla, California, which means... June Gloom--overcast skies that hug
the coastline. You can see an interesting discussion on this
meteorological condition on the SIO Climate Research Division's June Gloom website.
The Charles Lab has been
working hard with Jenna and Patrick writing papers, Chris continuing
his isotopic analyses of coral, and Lydia picking forams for
radiocarbon analysis. Patrick also just received the SIO Whole Earth
Society grant and he would like to thank this organization for their
support. Finally, Daniel Richter (profile in development), who is
co-advised by Chris and Devendra Lal, received a National Science
Foundation Graduate Student Fellowship! Congratulations Danny!
April 2006
Once again, Lydia makes the Charles Lab News--she gave her first talk at the PACLIM Conference, which focused on climate variability of the eastern North Pacific and western North America. It sounds like it went well.
As for the rest of the
lab, Jenna is writing up her first paper and so is Patrick. Patrick
also visited the Sigman Lab at Princeton to analyze nitrogen and oxygen
isotopes of Nitrate.
March 2006 (updated)
Our very own Lydia Roach was featured on the Scripps homepage:

Here's another from the SIO Alumni page:

By the way, Lydia isn't an alumnae yet.
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We've added some new photos to the Charles Lab website and now we are all much better looking.
Also, check out the photos from the Line Islands trip with Kim, Jordan, and Kristy here.
January/February 2006
A lot going in the Charles
Lab recently. Chris recently returned from Sri Lanka where he was on a
teaching fellowship. Lydia received a grant from the California Space
Institute and Patrick received a fellowship from the Ocean Drilling
Program. Patrick also discussed the first results of his thesis at the
Ocean Sciences conference in Honolulu, Hawaii. Jenna is busy writing
her first paper.
November/December 2005
Welcome to Kristina Dahl,
the new Post-Doc at the Charles Lab. Kristy comes to SIO from Woods
Hole and we'll have a personal page up for her soon. Until then, check
out her WHOI webpage here.
Chris is in Sri Lanka for a few months to teach and search for new coral skeletons.
August/September 2005
The Charles lab's technician Jordan Watson has joined former student, now Georgia Tech Associate Professor Kim Cobb
along with our future Post-Doctoral researcher Kristina Dahl on a trip
to collect more coral skeletons from Fanning and Christmas islands in
the tropical Pacific. A short explanation of their trip can be viewed here on the "Line Islands Expedition" website.
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