The Department of Geology and Geophysics (G&G) conducts research aimed at furthering our understanding of the dynamic processes of the Earth/Ocean/Atmosphere system, including connections between the solid earth, oceans, and cryosphere. We study the role of oceans in controlling Earth’s climate using natural archives such as sediments, corals, ice cores, tree rings and shark denticles to understand past climate and use numerical modeling to project that understanding into the future. We study a range of coastal processes, including variability of storminess through time and the impacts of climate change and storms on coastal regions. We study the dynamics of the solid earth, including the formation of oceanic plates at mid-ocean ridges, the return of those plates into Earth’s mantle at subduction zones, crustal formation that transfers minerals and gasses from the solid earth to the oceans and atmosphere at those plate boundaries, and the earthquakes that occur at all plate boundaries. We study a wide range of fluid-mediated processes, including those occurring at hydrothermal vents, at shelf-edge seeps and in subduction zone settings; and we study links between fluid flow, microbial activity and the subseafloor biosphere, which together exert strong controls on global geochemical fluxes. We also study how all of these systems on Earth might be expressed on other planets and moons, possibly creating conditions for life on other ocean worlds.

The Department today consists of about 30 Ph.D. level Scientific Staff and another 26 Technical Staff (many of whom hold Ph.D. degrees). In addition, there are about 20 graduate students pursuing their Ph.D. through the WHOI/MIT Joint Program and roughly 11 Postdoctoral Scholars, Fellows and Investigators.

The Scientific and Technical staff carry out research that involves sea-going deployments of instruments built in house; laboratory studies using high precision analytical facilities; and theoretical and computational studies of ocean and climate processes and geodynamics.

The G&G Department provides many of these capabilities to the broader scientific community by hosting national facilities, including the National Ocean Sciences Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Facility (NOSAMS), the Northeast National Ion Microprobe Facility (NENIMF), the national Ocean Bottom Seismograph Instrument Center (OBSIC), and the WHOI Seafloor Samples Laboratory.

Featured Dataverses

In order to use this feature you must have at least one published or linked dataverse.

Publish Dataverse

Are you sure you want to publish your dataverse? Once you do so it must remain published.

Publish Dataverse

This dataverse cannot be published because the dataverse it is in has not been published.

Delete Dataverse

Are you sure you want to delete your dataverse? You cannot undelete this dataverse.

Advanced Search

101 to 110 of 1,400 Results
JPEG Image - 507.2 KB - MD5: 774b0a4802a1de5cba5cbf3ef1f879d8
JPEG Image - 520.5 KB - MD5: b26f20e343aea9243aaf337d84527b84
JPEG Image - 209.8 KB - MD5: 6f6ac4be2e5511c22b26037adfdbb5fd
JPEG Image - 276.6 KB - MD5: d429c4a7b1cca3ee165eb72858a83a49
JPEG Image - 608.0 KB - MD5: 4394211417ea8f06f8aa453cce375b93
JPEG Image - 450.1 KB - MD5: 0ff3c242cfdb52310227c0e747d04c00
JPEG Image - 684.9 KB - MD5: 2540eb87ac4594fdb73c8f0a8ee10d9c
JPEG Image - 267.0 KB - MD5: 692097bf9b8436072fe19bbb7dcbc80b
JPEG Image - 359.6 KB - MD5: ebf14048466e4481baa1103b0b2befd7
JPEG Image - 341.2 KB - MD5: 7e43590fb2dc7deccb4e80d1e47d57bc
Add Data

Sign up or log in to create a dataverse or add a dataset.

Share Dataverse

Share this dataverse on your favorite social media networks.

Link Dataverse
Reset Modifications

Are you sure you want to reset the selected metadata fields? If you do this, any customizations (hidden, required, optional) you have done will no longer appear.