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Dive into the research topics where Geoffrey S. Ellis is active.

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Featured researches published by Geoffrey S. Ellis.


Science | 2014

Formation temperatures of thermogenic and biogenic methane

Daniel A. Stolper; Michael Lawson; Cara L. Davis; Alexandre A. Ferreira; E.V. Santos Neto; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Michael D. Lewan; Anna M. Martini; Y. Tang; Martin Schoell; Alex L. Sessions; John M. Eiler

Making of methane deep underground Technologies such as hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” can now extract natural gas from underground reservoirs. Within the gas, the ratio of certain isotopes holds clues to its origins. Stolper et al. analyzed a wide range of natural gas, including samples from some of the most active fracking sites in the United States. Using a “clumped isotope” technique, the authors could estimate the high temperatures at which methane formed deep underground, as well as the lower temperatures at which ancient microbes produced methane. The approach can help to distinguish the degree of mixing of gas from both sources. Science, this issue p. 1500 Isotopic analysis of methane indicates the timing and location of hydrocarbon gas formation in natural settings. Methane is an important greenhouse gas and energy resource generated dominantly by methanogens at low temperatures and through the breakdown of organic molecules at high temperatures. However, methane-formation temperatures in nature are often poorly constrained. We measured formation temperatures of thermogenic and biogenic methane using a “clumped isotope” technique. Thermogenic gases yield formation temperatures between 157° and 221°C, within the nominal gas window, and biogenic gases yield formation temperatures consistent with their comparatively lower-temperature formational environments (<50°C). In systems where gases have migrated and other proxies for gas-generation temperature yield ambiguous results, methane clumped-isotope temperatures distinguish among and allow for independent tests of possible gas-formation models.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2003

Paleolimnology of Lake Tanganyika, East Africa, over the past 100 k yr

Christopher A. Scholz; John W. King; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Peter K. Swart; J. Curt Stager; Steven M. Colman

New sediment core data from a unique slow-sedimentation rate site in Lake Tanganyika contain a much longer and continuous record of limnological response to climate change than have been previously observed in equatorial regions of central Africa. The new core site was first located through an extensive seismic reflection survey over the Kavala Island Ridge (KIR), a sedimented basement high that separates the Kigoma and Kalemie Basins in Lake Tanganyika.Proxy analyses of paleoclimate response carried out on core T97-52V include paleomagnetic and index properties, TOC and isotopic analyses of organic carbon, and diatom and biogenic silica analyses. A robust age model based on 11 radiocarbon (AMS) dates indicates a linear, continuous sedimentation rate nearly an order of magnitude slower here compared to other core sites around the lake. This age model indicates continuous sedimentation over the past 79 k yr, and a basal age in excess of 100 k yr.The results of the proxy analyses for the past ∼ 20 k yr are comparable to previous studies focused on that interval in Lake Tanganyika, and show that the lake was about 350 m lower than present at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Repetitive peaks in TOC and corresponding drops in δ13C over the past 79 k yr indicate periods of high productivity and mixing above the T97-52V core site, probably due to cooler and perhaps windier conditions. From ∼ 80 through ∼ 58 k yr the δ13C values are relatively negative (−26 to −28 l) suggesting predominance of algal contributions to bottom sediments at this site during this time. Following this interval there is a shift to higher values of δ13C, indicating a possible shift to C-4 pathway-dominated grassland-type vegetation in the catchment, and indicating cooler, dryer conditions from ∼ 55 k yr through the LGM. Two seismic sequence boundaries are observed at shallow stratigraphic levels in the seismic reflection data, and the upper boundary correlates to a major discontinuity near the base of T97-52V. We interpret these discontinuities to reflect major, prolonged drops in lake level below the core site (393 m), with the lower boundary correlating to marine oxygen isotope Stage 6. This suggests that the previous glacial period was considerably cooler and more arid in the equatorial tropics than was the last glacial period.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Vegetation Controls on Weathering Intensity during the Last Deglacial Transition in Southeast Africa

Sarah J. Ivory; Michael M. McGlue; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Anne Marie Lézine; Andrew S. Cohen; Annie Vincens

Tropical climate is rapidly changing, but the effects of these changes on the geosphere are unknown, despite a likelihood of climatically-induced changes on weathering and erosion. The lack of long, continuous paleo-records prevents an examination of terrestrial responses to climate change with sufficient detail to answer questions about how systems behaved in the past and may alter in the future. We use high-resolution records of pollen, clay mineralogy, and particle size from a drill core from Lake Malawi, southeast Africa, to examine atmosphere-biosphere-geosphere interactions during the last deglaciation (∼18–9 ka), a period of dramatic temperature and hydrologic changes. The results demonstrate that climatic controls on Lake Malawi vegetation are critically important to weathering processes and erosion patterns during the deglaciation. At 18 ka, afromontane forests dominated but were progressively replaced by tropical seasonal forest, as summer rainfall increased. Despite indication of decreased rainfall, drought-intolerant forest persisted through the Younger Dryas (YD) resulting from a shorter dry season. Following the YD, an intensified summer monsoon and increased rainfall seasonality were coeval with forest decline and expansion of drought-tolerant miombo woodland. Clay minerals closely track the vegetation record, with high ratios of kaolinite to smectite (K/S) indicating heavy leaching when forest predominates, despite variable rainfall. In the early Holocene, when rainfall and temperature increased (effective moisture remained low), open woodlands expansion resulted in decreased K/S, suggesting a reduction in chemical weathering intensity. Terrigenous sediment mass accumulation rates also increased, suggesting critical linkages among open vegetation and erosion during intervals of enhanced summer rainfall. This study shows a strong, direct influence of vegetation composition on weathering intensity in the tropics. As climate change will likely impact this interplay between the biosphere and geosphere, tropical landscape change could lead to deleterious effects on soil and water quality in regions with little infrastructure for mitigation.


Geology | 2017

East African weathering dynamics controlled by vegetation-climate feedbacks

Sarah J. Ivory; Michael M. McGlue; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Adam Boehlke; Anne Marie Lézine; Annie Vincens; Andrew S. Cohen

Tropical weathering has important linkages to global biogeochemistry and landscape evolution in the East African rift. We disentangle the influences of climate and terrestrial vegetation on chemical weathering intensity and erosion at Lake Malawi using a long sediment record. Fossil pollen, microcharcoal, particle size, and mineralogy data affirm that the detrital clays accumulating in deep water within the lake are controlled by feedbacks between climate and hinterland forest composition. Particle-size patterns are also best explained by vegetation, through feedbacks with lake levels, wildfires, and erosion. We develop a new source-to-sink framework that links lacustrine sedimentation to hinterland vegetation in tropical rifts. Our analysis suggests that climate-vegetation interactions and their coupling to weathering/erosion could threaten future food security and has implications for accurately predicting petroleum play elements in continental rift basins.


Interpretation | 2015

Introduction to special section: China shale gas and shale oil plays

Shu Jiang; Hongliu Zeng; Jinchuan Zhang; Neil S. Fishman; Baojun Bai; Xianming Xiao; Tongwei Zhang; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Xianjie Li; Bryony Richards-McClung; Dongsheng Cai; Yongsheng Ma

In the last 10 years, the success of shale gas and shale oil productions as a result of technological advances in horizontal drilling, hydraulic fracturing and nanoscale reservoir characterization have revolutionized the energy landscape in the United States. Resource assessment by the China


Organic Geochemistry | 2012

Effect of organic-matter type and thermal maturity on methane adsorption in shale-gas systems

Tongwei Zhang; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Stephen C. Ruppel; Kitty L. Milliken; Rongsheng Yang


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 1995

Evaluation of lipid‐containing semipermeable membrane devices for monitoring organochlorine contaminants in the Upper Mississippi river

Geoffrey S. Ellis; Colleen E. Rostad; James N. Huckins; Christopher J. Schmitt; Jimmie D. Petty; Patrick MacCarthy


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2005

A kinetic model for thermally induced hydrogen and carbon isotope fractionation of individual n-alkanes in crude oil

Yongchun Tang; Yongsong Huang; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Yi Wang; Paul G. Kralert; Bruno Gillaizeau; Qisheng Ma; Rong Hwang


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2008

Experimental investigation on thermochemical sulfate reduction by H2S initiation

Tongwei Zhang; Alon Amrani; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Qisheng Ma; Yongchun Tang


Organic Geochemistry | 2007

Effect of hydrocarbon type on thermochemical sulfate reduction

Tongwei Zhang; Geoffrey S. Ellis; Kang shi Wang; Clifford C. Walters; Simon R. Kelemen; Bruno Gillaizeau; Yongchun Tang

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Tongwei Zhang

University of Texas at Austin

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Yongchun Tang

California Institute of Technology

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Qisheng Ma

California Institute of Technology

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Alon Amrani

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Michael D. Lewan

United States Geological Survey

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Peter W. Swarzenski

United States Geological Survey

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Aguinaldo Silva

Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul

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Hiran Zani

National Institute for Space Research

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