James M. Russell

Last updated
James M. Russell
Alma mater Wesleyan University (BA)
University of Minnesota (PhD)
Scientific career
FieldsPaleoclimatology, climatology
Institutions University of Minnesota Duluth
Brown University
Thesis The Holocene Paleolimnology and Paleoclimatology of Lake Edward, Uganda-Congo  (2004)
Doctoral advisor Thomas C. Johnson  [ Wikidata ]

James Michael Russell is an American paleoclimatologist and climatologist. He is a professor of Earth, environmental, and planetary sciences and is currently the senior associate dean of dean of faculty at Brown University. [1] Russell researches the climate, paleoclimate, and limnology.

Contents

Education

Russell received a B.A. in Earth and Environmental Science from Wesleyan University in 1998. [2] Russell then worked as a Junior Scientist at the Limnological Research Center at the University of Minnesota for one year before beginning his Ph.D. in ecology at the University of Minnesota. [3] Russell's doctoral advisor was Thomas C. Johnson  [ Wikidata ]. [3] Russell's dissertation in 2004 was titled The Holocene Paleolimnology and Paleoclimatology of Lake Edward, Uganda-Congo. [4]

Career and research

Russell is a paleoclimatologist and climatologist. [5] [6] After graduating from the University of Minnesota, Russell joined the Large Lakes Observatory at the University of Minnesota Duluth. [2] In 2006, Russell joined the faculty of Brown University, where he was awarded tenure and the Royce Family Professorship of Teaching Excellence, in recognition of his teaching ability in 2018. He was awarded the AGU Willi Dansgaard Award in 2020. [7]

Russell's primary fields are paleoclimatology, paleolimnology, and paleoecology. He is particularly well known for his work reconstructing climates from Tropical lake sediments. [8]

According to Scopus, he has published 113 research articles so far with 37366 citations and has an H-index of 32. [9]

Editorial activities

Academic honors

Notable Student and Postdoctoral Advisees

Source: [2]

Postdocs

Students

Selected works

Books

Journal articles

Related Research Articles

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Paleoclimatology is the scientific study of climates predating the invention of meteorological instruments, when no direct measurement data were available. As instrumental records only span a tiny part of Earth's history, the reconstruction of ancient climate is important to understand natural variation and the evolution of the current climate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Proxy (climate)</span> Preserved physical characteristics allowing reconstruction of past climatic conditions

In the study of past climates ("paleoclimatology"), climate proxies are preserved physical characteristics of the past that stand in for direct meteorological measurements and enable scientists to reconstruct the climatic conditions over a longer fraction of the Earth's history. Reliable global records of climate only began in the 1880s, and proxies provide the only means for scientists to determine climatic patterns before record-keeping began.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paleolimnology</span> Scientific study of ancient lakes and streams

Paleolimnology is a scientific sub-discipline closely related to both limnology and paleoecology. Paleolimnological studies focus on reconstructing the past environments of inland waters using the geologic record, especially with regard to events such as climatic change, eutrophication, acidification, and internal ontogenic processes.

David A. Hodell is a British–American geologist and paleoclimatologist. He currently holds the position of Woodwardian Professor of Geology in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge, where he is also a fellow of Clare College. He is a dual citizen of the United Kingdom and the United States. Previously, he taught at the University of Florida from 1986–2008, earning the rank of full professor in geological sciences. Hodell was also the director of the Stable Isotope Laboratory from 1996–2008. Hodell earned his Ph.D. in 1986 in oceanography from the University of Rhode Island after earning his bachelor of arts in 1980 in geology from the University of Vermont.

Lorraine Lisiecki is an American paleoclimatologist. She is a professor in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She has proposed a new analysis of the 100,000-year problem in the Milankovitch theory of climate change. She also created the analytical software behind the LR04, a "standard representation of the climate history of the last five million years".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maureen Raymo</span> American climate scientist and marine geologist

Maureen E. "Mo" Raymo is an American paleoclimatologist and marine geologist. She is the Co-Founding Dean Emerita of the Columbia Climate School and the G. Unger Vetlesen Professor of Earth & Environmental Sciences at Columbia University. From 2011 to 2022 she was also the Director of the LDEO Core Repository and until 2024 was the Founding Director of the LDEO Hudson River Field Station. From 2020 to 2023 she was first Interim Director then Director of Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, the first climate scientist and first female scientist to head the institution.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stefan Kröpelin</span>

Stefan Kröpelin is a geologist and climate researcher at the University of Cologne who specializes in studying the eastern Sahara desert and its climatic history. In 2017, he was awarded with the Communicator Award of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft for the excellent communication of his research both in Germany and international.

Françoise Gasse was a French paleobiologist, paleoclimatologist and paleohydrologist. She specialized in environmental phenomena and more specifically the study of lacustrine sediments from ancient lakes in Africa and Asia region. F. Gasse had special impact in starting the first research projects that aim at rebuilding paleoclimatic variations and Quaternary paleoenvironments in different regions and precisely: the Sahara and the Sahel, East Africa and Madagascar, Western (Caspian) and Southern (Tibet), and in the Middle East (Lebanon). She was a member of PAGES / The International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amy Leventer</span> American paleoclimatologist

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herb Wright</span>

Herbert Edgar Wright Jr. was an American Quaternary scientist. He contributed to the understanding of landscape history and environmental changes over the past 100,000 years in many parts of the world. He studied arid-region geomorphology and landscape evolution, as well as glacial geology and climate history. His study of these topics led him to the study of vegetation development and environmental history and allowed him to define the timing and mechanisms of climate-driven vegetational shifts in North America during the last 18,000 years and to recognize the role of natural fire in the dynamics of northern coniferous forests. He applied these insights to wilderness conservation and landscape management. He covered many other aspects of paleoecology including lake development and paleolimnology, and the history and development of the vast patterned peatlands of Minnesota and elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere. Although his work was concentrated in Minnesota, he was also involved in a major synthesis of global paleoclimatology. Beyond Minnesota and the Great Lakes region, Wright studied a wide range of research questions elsewhere in North America, and in the Near East, Europe, Asia, Latin America, and Antarctica. He advised over 75 graduate students and mentored many more students, visitors, and colleagues worldwide.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter B. de Menocal</span> American oceanographer and paleoclimatologist

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Jessica E. Tierney (born 1982) is an American paleoclimatologist who has worked with geochemical proxies such as marine sediments, mud, and TEX86, to study past climate in East Africa. Her papers have been cited more than 2,500 times; her most cited work is Northern Hemisphere Controls on Tropical Southeast African Climate During the Past 60,000 Years. Tierney is currently a professor of geosciences and the Thomas R. Brown Distinguished Chair in Integrative Science at the University of Arizona and faculty affiliate in the University of Arizona School of Geography, Development and Environment Tierney is the first climatologist to win NSF's Alan T Waterman Award (2022) since its inception in 1975.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amelia E. Shevenell</span> American marine geologist

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Christopher Alfred Scholz is an American geologist who is known for his work in Paleolimnology and Rift Basin Evolution. He is Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Syracuse University.

References

  1. "Russell, James". vivo.brown.edu. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  2. 1 2 3 "James M. Russell CV" (PDF). Researchers at Brown. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  3. 1 2 "Thomas C. Johnson CV" (PDF). University of Minnesota Duluth. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  4. "Graduate student alumni directory". University of Minnesota,College of Biological Sciences. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  5. "James M. Russell". Researchers at Brown. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  6. "James Russell". Institute at Brown for Environment and Society. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  7. "AGU - American Geophysical Union". www.agu.org. Retrieved 2024-02-12.
  8. "Project seeks climate clues deep in Indonesian lakebed". News from Brown. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  9. "Scopus preview - Scopus - Author details (Russell, James M.)". www.scopus.com. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  10. 1 2 3 4 "James Russell" (PDF). 2020-07-24.
  11. Kröpelin, S. Verschuren, D. Lézine, A.-M. Eggermont, H. Cocquyt, C. Francus, P. Cazet, J.-P. Fagot, M. Russell, J.M. Darius, F. Conley, D.J. Schuster, M. Suchodoletz, H. Von Engstrom, D.R. Climate-Driven Ecosystem Succession in the Sahara : the past 6000 years. OCLC   695108421.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. Brovkin, V.; Claussen, M. (2008-11-28). "Comment on "Climate-Driven Ecosystem Succession in the Sahara: The Past 6000 Years"". Science. 322 (5906): 1326b. Bibcode:2008Sci...322.1326B. doi: 10.1126/science.1163381 . ISSN   0036-8075. PMID   19039121.
  13. Tierney, J. E.; Russell, J. M.; Huang, Y.; Damste, J. S. S.; Hopmans, E. C.; Cohen, A. S. (2008-10-10). "Northern Hemisphere Controls on Tropical Southeast African Climate During the Past 60,000 Years". Science. 322 (5899): 252–255. Bibcode:2008Sci...322..252T. doi:10.1126/science.1160485. ISSN   0036-8075. PMID   18787132. S2CID   7364713.
  14. Friedman, Gerald M. (1978). "Classification of sediments and sedimentary rocks". Sedimentology. Encyclopedia of Earth Science. pp. 202–216. doi:10.1007/3-540-31079-7_44. ISBN   978-0-87933-152-8.