| Scientific Guest Lecturers |
If
you are interested in having GERG scientists present to your
classes please directly contact the presenter indicated to
arrange scheduling. We will update this list on a regular
basis with contact information. Please share this information
with your faculty and staff as you deem appropriate.
Norman Guinasso
-
" Monitoring Currents Along the Texas Coast: Five Years
of the Texas Automated Buoy System (TABS)"
In 1995 we began measuring currents along the Texas
Coast using current meters that report data in real time
through over the internet. This talk will describe the
methods used and the results obtained after 5 years of
operations.
-
" Flow through the Cayman Sea into the Gulf of Mexico:
1999 Observations"
In 1999 we conducted a cruise to the Cayman
Sea. Part of that cruise involved a transect of the Yucatan
Strait during which we made measurements using Acoustic
Doppler Current profilers and CTDs. I will discuss these
measurements and historical measurements of the northerly
and southerly flow through the strait.
-
"Utilization of Buoys, Moorings, and Sensors in Real-time
Ocean Observing Systems"
I will talk about the instrumentation we use
and intend to use in ocean monitoring. I will talk about
the longevity and fouling of different kinds of sensors
and give some insight into how modern sensors may advance
oceanographic research.
-
"Physical Oceanography at Gulf of Mexico Chemosynthetic
Seep Sites"
These sites in 500-1000m water depth in the
Gulf of Mexico, experience large temperature changes and
highly variable currents. I will talk about measurements
made by GERG scientists in the 1990's and discuss how
these changes in water properties affect the stability
of gas hydrates.
Terry
Wade
-"
Results of NOAA's National Status and Trends Program -
Mussel Watch"
This Project has monitored the contaminant concentration
of bivalves from US coastal sites and the Great Lakes
for 15 years to determine trends in contaminant loading.
(alternates J. Sericano, G. Denoux)
-"The Black Sea Mussel Watch Program"
The "mussel Watch" concept was applied as a pilot program
by the countries surrounding the Black Sea with scientific
support from IOC/UNESCO.
-
"Quality Control, Intercalibrations, and Reference Materials
in Environmental Chemistry"
For environmental contamination studies, bad data is worse
than no data. Historically the quality of data has been
documented by the use of quality control samples including
intercalibrations and the use of standard reference materials.
(alternate J. Sericano)
-
"Pollution of the Marine Environment"
General review of the history of contamination of the
environment. Specific topics can be covered on request.
(alternate J. Sericano)
-
"Atmospheric Deposition of Nutrients"
Discussions of atmospheric deposition by precipitation
and dry deposition (e.g. dust) are discussed in relationship
to two local estuaries, Galveston and Corpus Christi Bays.
- "Long Range Transport of Organic Contaminants"
The discovery of pesticides and PCB in Arctic biota led
to research on the long range transport of contaminants
by the atmosphere. Results of studies in , Galveston and
Corpus Christi Bays will be included.
-
"Historical Trends of Contaminants in Coastal Environments"
The results from 14 years of the NOAA Mussel Watch Project
and results of dated core samples from Gulf Coast are
described.
(alternate J. Sericano)
-
"Lysosomal Damage as an Indicator of Environmental Health"
In order to ensure sustainable development the health
status of ecosystems must be determined. Lysosomal damage
is an early warning biomarker of adverse conditions.
- " The History of the Antifouling Agent Tributyl Tin"
Tributyl tin an extremely efficient antifouling compound
was limited in its use in 1989. Results of why its use
was limited, how the environment responded and the current
controversy of weather its use on vessels larger than
25 meters will be presented.
Roger
Sassen
-
"Shallow Gas Hydrate as the Product of an Active Subsurface
Hydrocarbon System, Gulf of Mexico"
Gas hydrate research is shifting from descriptive geology
to a more quantitative approach to better understand gas
hydrate origin and stability. Much gas hydrate accumulation
in the Gulf of Mexico is linked to processes of hydrocarbon
generation and migration at great depth. Simultaneous
salt deformation and active faulting created conduits
that transports hydrocarbons to the cold sea floor, giving
rise to a future energy mineral and to life in an extreme
environment.
-
"Gas Hydrate in the Gulf of Mexico: Is Gas Hydrate Decomposition
Significant?"
Gas hydrate could be an agent of global climate change,
or possibly the hypothesis is overstated. The present
literature on gas hydrate and greenhouse gases involves
indirect evidence or is speculative. Understanding the
significance of gas hydrate decomposition in the Gulf
following a sea level rise after the Pleistocene is important.
-
"Reservoir Geochemistry of the Pabst Field: Late Charge
of Supermature Hydrocarbon Basins, Main Pass, Gulf of
Mexico"
The history of oil and gas fields in the east-central
Gulf of Mexico is complex, involving multiple stages of
filling, non thermal alteration, and finally destruction
of oil fields as a consequence of flushing by a late charge
of gas. The source of supermature gas is as yet unknown,
changing our views of the subsurface hydrocarbon system.
-
"Paleoseeps at Damon Mound: Origin of Gulf Coast Salt
Dome Cap Rocks"
Damon Mound represents one of the best documented
salt dome cap rocks on the Gulf Coast, an outcropping
window to massive hydrocarbon seepage in the shallow Gulf
of Mexico during the Oligocene. The link between bacterial
oxidation of oil and gas, bacterial sulfate reduction
and oxidation explains enormous disk-like features of
authigenic carbonate over shallow salt domes, the origin
of commercial deposits of elemental sulfur, and the intriguing
link between seeps and coral reefs.
- "Origin of Oil and Gas Along the Northern Gulf Rim
from Upper Jurasic Source Rocks"
The origin of oil from the Upper Jurassic Smackover Formation
along the northern Gulf Rim is a classic case history
of the generation, migration, thermal alteration, and
eventual destruction of oil fields with increasing temperatures
during burial. The final result of thermal cracking is
methane, then destruction of methane accompanied by increasing
volumes of hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide as a consequence
of thermochemical sulfur reduction. Ultimately, only pyrobitumen
and stable gases such as nitrogen survive in reservoir
rock.
Jose
Sericano
-
"The "Mussel Watch" Concept and its Applicability to Global
Chemical Contamination Monitoring Programs"
Although the use of biological monitors has become a standard
practice in different national and international programs
in the last two decades, there are several complicating
factors -discussed here- that need to be taken into account
when sampling over large geographical areas.
(alternate T. Wade)
- "The International Mussel Watch Program"
The objectives and results of the initial implementation
phase of the international "mussel watch" program in Latin
American countries are presented and compared to the data
produced during the NOAA's national status and trends
program in the U.S..
(alternate T. Wade)
-
"Bivalves as Bioindicators of Trace Organic Contamination
in Coastal Environments"
Bivalves can be valuable bioindicators of environmental
contamination by trace organic compounds only if their
limitations are fully understood. The kinetics of the
uptake and depuration of trace organic contaminants by
field-transplanted and laboratory-exposed oysters is discussed.
(alternate T.Wade)
-
"Chlorinated Biphenyls in the Environment"
Polychlorinated biphenyls (pcbs) are a class of 209 congeners
highly persistent in the environment occurring in most
human and animal adipose samples, milk, sediment, and
numerous other matrices. An overview of their ubiquitous
occurrence is presented.
(alternate T. Wade)
-
"Planar Polychlorinated Biphenyls, Dioxins, and Furans
in the Environment"
Dioxins and some related furans and planar pcbs are among
the man-made chemicals subject to significant attention
because of their high toxicity, high persistence and ubiquitous
distribution in the environment.
(alternate T.Wade)
NOTE:
With appropriate notice more general, overarching topic
areas and presentations can be tailored to your particular
classes' needs.