Peter Brewer
Chief Scientist
MBARI
Peter has taken part in more than 30 deep-sea cruises, and has served as chief scientist on major expeditions and on more than 90 ROV dives with MBARI ships and vehicles. His research interests include the ocean geochemistry of the greenhouse gases. He has devised novel techniques both for measurement and for extracting the oceanic signatures of global change. At MBARI his current interests include the geochemistry of gas hydrates, and the evolution of the oceanic fossil fuel CO2 signal. He has developed novel techniques for deep ocean laser Raman spectroscopy, and for testing the principles and impacts of deep ocean CO2 injection.
Ed Peltzer
Senior Research Specialist
MBARI
Ed is an ocean chemist who has been with MBARI since 1997. He has been involved in developing in situ laser Raman spectrometry instruments and lab based analytical techniques to study the composition of gases in gas hydrates and deep-sea vents. He has collaborated on the development of new instrumentation for the measurement of temperature and pH from ROVs and deep-sea observatories. As the group's project manager, Ed is also responsible for expedition planning and logistics.
Nancy Barr
Web/Print Project Manager
MBARI
Nancy manages the editing, design, and production of the MBARI annual report and participates in a variety of editorial and communication projects. She also oversees the institute website. For this expedition she will be in charge of the daily reports that will be posted to this website and will assist with other science crew tasks.
Peter Walz
Senior Research Technician
MBARI
Peter has worked as a research technician for several scientists at MBARI. For the past 10 years he has supported the research efforts of Peter Brewer and his interests regarding the ocean chemistry of greenhouse gases such as methane and carbon dioxide. Peter is responsible for the design, testing, maintenance, and deployment of the oceangoing science hardware and works closely with the marine operations group to integrate new equipment and technology with MBARI's ROVs.
Martín Hernández Ayón
Collaborator
Universidad Autónoma de Baja California
Martín Hernández Ayón is a chemical oceanographer. His research is focused on the inorganic carbon system, ocean acidification and biogeochemistry in the coastal regions of Baja California, the Sea of Cortez, the subtropical region where the oxygen minimum zone is located, and, more recently, the Gulf of Mexico.
Gabriela Y. Cervantes
Graduate Student
Universidad Autónoma de Baja California
Gaby is a graduate student in the coastal oceanography program at the University of Baja California in
Ensenada, Mexico. She is doing her graduate studies on the dynamics of CO2 in seawater from a coastal monitoring site known as Ensenada Station.
Abbey Chrystal
Graduate Student
University of California, Santa Cruz
Abbey Chrystal is a graduate student in earth and planetary sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research focuses on reconstructing long-term records of past ocean carbonate chemistry parameters. On this cruise she will be collecting sediment push cores and bottom water samples to help calibrate the relationship between the shell chemistry of benthic foraminifera and the chemistry of the bottom water and porewater chemistry in which they grow.
Joseph Murray
Graduate Student
University of California, Santa Cruz
Joseph Murray is a first year ocean sciences Ph.D. student in the lab of Dr. Adina Paytan at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He is interested in coastal marine chemistry and the impact of submarine groundwater discharge on marine biogeochemical cycles. His current research is focused on using oxygen and nitrogen isotopes in nitrate to study sources and cycling of nitrogen in the coastal ocean. As part of this cruise, he plans to collect samples in order to study the impact of anthropogenic fertilizer runoff from the Yaqui Valley on the marine nitrogen cycle in the Gulf of California, including assessing the role groundwater discharge plays in this process.