Joanna Morabito ’08 writes about her research experience with Kira Lawrence, assistant professor of geology and environmental geosciences
Joanna Morabito ’08 (Yorktown Heights, N.Y.) is pursuing a degree in geology. She spent the summer doing research at Brown University with Kira Lawrence, assistant professor of geology and environmental geosciences. The following is a firsthand account of Morabito’s experiences.
 
This summer, I had the privilege of assisting Professor Kira Lawrence  in generating sea surface temperature and productivity records for the  North Atlantic Ocean. Productivity and sea surface temperature data are  gathered through the analysis of ocean sediment cores. The records we  developed, which span from approximately five million years ago to the  present, will help to make the distinct changes of the earth’s climate  that occurred during the glaciation of the Northern Hemisphere better  understood.
This experience was very special because Professor Lawrence gave me  the opportunity to work alongside professors, graduate students, and  undergraduate students at Brown University. I have always enjoyed  research and, now that I have had the chance to work with graduate  students and learn about their various scientific investigations, I know  that graduate school will be the next step in my future.
During my first three weeks at Brown, I learned the laboratory  techniques required for gathering sea surface temperature data from  ocean sediment samples. Resistant organic compounds, alkenones, which  are generated by ocean surface dwelling algae, must be extracted from  the sediment and then analyzed in order to determine sea surface  temperature variations. This process was intimidating at first, but with  the help of Professor Lawrence and graduate students Laura, Caitlin,  and Emily, I quickly caught on.
I also learned that paleoclimatology not only involves geology, but  biology and chemistry to study the Earth’s climate and I became very  grateful for the chemistry, biology, and oceanography classes I had  taken for my geology major. Once the organic compounds had been  extracted, we analyzed the alkenones using gas chromatography, which  separates the heavier (more saturated) alkenones from lighter (less  saturated) alkenones. As sea surface temperature decreases, the algae  that produce alkenones make more of the less saturated alkenones.  Therefore, sea surface temperature can be determined by analyzing the  ratio of the more saturated alkenones to less saturated alkenones  extracted from a specific sediment sample.
Not only can alkenones be used to estimate past sea surface  temperature, but the concentration of alkenones found in each sediment  sample may also give insight on the biological productivity of the  ocean’s surface at the time that particular sample was deposited. Based  on research that Professor Lawrence has previously conducted, there is a  distinct drop in the concentration of alkenones extracted from sediment  at the many sites in the North Atlantic that she has studied. This  suggests a major change in biologic productivity occurred in association  with the glaciation of the Northern Hemisphere. Yet, whether this drop  was synchronous or time-transgressive throughout high latitude regions  was unclear from previous work.
During the last few weeks of my research, we used another technique  commonly performed to measure biologic productivity at ocean sites  throughout the world, testing sediment samples from various sites in the  North Atlantic for biogenic opal. I gathered preliminary opal data for  three sediment cores in the North Atlantic. I feel that the extraction  of the biogenic opal was the most interesting, challenging, and  rewarding part of my research experience at Brown.
It was interesting, yet frustrating, to see how two of the sites in  the Atlantic had no measurable biogenic opal. Although I did not get the  desired results at first, I was relieved and thrilled that the third  site I tested had a significant amount of biogenic opal. My data from  this site confirmed that changes in biologic productivity were  time-transgressive across the North Atlantic, occurring between 3.5 and  2.5 million years ago.
This experience was very valuable because I had a chance to learn  about an area of geology that I have not yet been exposed to in any  class. Professor Lawrence is a very kind and dedicated professor who is  very passionate about her research. The excitement she brought everyday  to work made this research opportunity memorable.