MF
Member Since 2007
Marilyn L. Fogel
Emeritus Professor, University of California Riverside
Major area of research is highly interdisciplinary with three major thrusts. I use stable isotope biogeochemistry to study modern environments on Earth from the tropics to deserts to the Arctic. Armed with this knowledge, I use what I’ve learned to study the biogeochemistry and paleobiology on Earth including how life originated and interacted with major geological forces over time. As an extension of this research, I participate in the study of astrobiology attempting to figure out the signatures of life that are robust enough to determine if and how life might have originated and functioned on other solar system bodies like Mars. B. S. in Biology, Penn State University (1973) and Ph.D. in Botany (Marine Science), University of Texas at Austin, Port Aransas Marine Lab (1977). Carnegie Corporation Fellow (1977-1979) and senior staff scientist at the Carnegie Institution of Washington’s Geophysical Laboratory (1979 to present). Visiting scientist at Carnegie’s Dept. of Plant Biology (1985-1986), Dartmouth College (1995), University of Maryland (2003-2005). Adjunct professor at Univ. of Delaware and Fellow at Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (2003-2009). Director of Geobiology and Low Temperature Geochemistry program at NSF (2009-2010). Member of AGU and the Geochemical Society. Principal Investigator (2007-2011), W. M. Keck Foundation, Investigating the Biosphere’s Roots in Deep Earth Geochemistry, studying the origins of biogeochemical cycles on earth and Mars and life in extreme environments. Member of NASA’s Astrobiology Institute since 1998. Published over 150 papers in refereed journals and books. Publications of note include: (l987) Depletion of 13C in lignin and its implications for stable carbon isotope studies, Nature; (1993) Photosynthetic fractionation of the stable isotopes of oxygen and carbon, Plant Physiology; (2005)Ecosystem collapse in Pleistocene Australia and a human role in megafaunal extinction, Science; and (2012) A Reduced Organic Carbon Component in Martian Basalts, Science. Elected Fellow of the Geochemical Society (2003). Served recently on the Geochemical Society’s Treibs Medal Committee, organized a recent session in Biogeosciences jointly with Planetary Science.
Professional Experience
University of California Riverside
Emeritus Professor
2020 - Present
Education
Doctorate
1977
Honors & Awards
Eunice Newton Foote Medal for Earth-Life Science
Received December 2022
Citation
Marilyn Fogel’s groundbreaking career spurred the opening of entirely new research areas in the biogeosciences, advancing knowledge at the Earth-life interface and inspiring a generation of geoscientists. During a career spanning more than 40 years, she drove the integration of isotope geochemistry with a variety of topics in the environmental and life sciences, ranging from paleoecology to the search for life on other worlds to questions in human evolution. She began this work at the Carnegie Institution during an era in which the word “biogeosciences” was seldom used and in which women were a rarity in geoscience.
Marilyn was undaunted. The hallmark of her research was a holistic approach in which she established and advanced novel analytical methods; used them to make fundamental, foundational observations; and applied these innovations in impactful ways through numerous collaborations. Following this approach, Marilyn was the first to characterize many isotope fractionations for key biomolecules and critical biochemical processes. She pioneered the pursuit of palaeoecological and anthropological questions using isotope analyses. She was among the first to analyze isotopes in proteins and amino acids, ushering in new insights into nitrogen cycling in soils, sediments and aqueous systems. She took these and other insights into the field of astrobiology when it was still new.
Over the years, Marilyn generously mentored students and postdocs who grew into a vast network of exceptional scientists; the number of stable isotope laboratories established and led by her former mentees is a remarkable legacy, the impact of which will be felt for decades to come. Her scope of influence grew as she stepped up into visible and creative leadership roles at the National Science Foundation and AGU; at the University of California (UC), Merced, where she was a founding department chair; and then as founding director of a new biogeosciences institute at UC Riverside. To all these roles she brought keen scientific insight, deeply humane ethics, an infectiously optimistic personality and a service-oriented leadership style. Marilyn thereby became a beloved citizen-leader of the biogeoscience community, inspiring countless scientists working at the Earth-life interface. She continued to inspire to the very end, through her astonishing example of leading and engaging while living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease). An extraordinary person who made extraordinary contributions at the intersection of Earth and life sciences, Marilyn Fogel is the perfect recipient of the inaugural Eunice Newton Foote Medal for Earth-Life Science.
— Ariel D. Anbar
Arizona State University
Tempe, Arizona
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Union Fellow
Received December 2018
Citation
For pioneering breakthroughs and extensive achievement in isotopic biogeochemistry and leadership to establish the field of Biogeosciences.
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Publications
Pyrogenic carbon erosion after the Rim Fire, Yosemite National Park: The Role of Burn Severity and S...
Pyrogenic carbon (PyC) is an incomplete combustion by‐product with longer soil residence times compared with nonpyrogenic components of the s...
February 28, 2019
AGU Abstracts
Microbial Ecology of Jotun Spring, an Artic Geothermal Spring, Svalbard, Norway and Its Astrobiological Relevance.
RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES IN HIGH-LATITUDE ECOSYSTEMS: INTERACTIONS THAT INFLUENCE SOIL, SEDIMENT, AND AQUATIC PROCESSES IN A CHANGING CRYOSPHERE I POSTER
biogeosciences | 12 december 2022
Ifeoma R Ugwuanyi , Marilyn L. Fogel, Andrew Steel...
Jotun geothermal springs in Svalbard are the northernmost documented thermal springs. These springs are forming calcite travertines and studying a sha...
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Trust your gut microbiome: intramolecular isotopic fingerprints of amino acids in mouse tissues
MASS SPECTROMETRY, ISOTOPE METROLOGY, FINE-SCALE ANALYSES: HOW THE DETAILS REVEAL THE BIGGER PICTURE I
volcanology, geochemistry and petrology | 14 december 2020
Kaycee Morra, Marilyn L. Fogel, Seth D. Newsome
The degree to which the gut microbiome contributes to the protein metabolism of its host has not yet been fully explored, yet this information would a...
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Advocating for Science in the Salton Sea: The Salton Sea Task Force
SCIENCE TO ACTION: LEVERAGING DATA AND SCIENCE FOR LOCAL AND REGIONAL DECISION-MAKING I POSTERS
science and society | 09 december 2020
Jonathan Nye, Marilyn L. Fogel
The Salton Sea, an endorheic saline lake in southern California, USA, is in crisis. A combination of mismanagement, negligence and competition between...
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Volunteer Experience
2020 - 2021
Member
Macelwane Medal Committee
2017 - 2018
Immediate Past President
Biogeosciences Executive Committee
2015 - 2016
President
Student Breakfast SFG Leaders
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