Jeff Chanton
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Jeffrey Paul "Jeff" Chanton is the 2017-2018 Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor and John Widmer Winchester professor of oceanography at Florida State University.[1] His research interests include Arctic methane release from the thawing of permafrost.[2][3] Chanton co-created the Master of Science in aquatic environmental sciences at FSU with Nancy Marcus.[1]
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (March 2021) |
Jeffrey Paul Chanton | |
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Alma mater | New College of Florida, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Spouse | Susan Cerulean |
Children | 3 |
Awards | 2018. Tallahassee Scientific Society Gold Metal
2017. Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor 2017. Guardian of the Flame Award for Service to Florida State University 2015. Fellow, American Geophysical Union. 2015. Top 10 Water Analysis and Environmental Papers (Environmental Science and Technology’s most significant papers of the last 18 months), for Chanton et al., 2015. 2014. Transformation through Teaching, FSU Spiritual Life Project. 2009. Editor’s citation for outstanding reviewer, Limnology and Oceanography. 2008. William H. Patrick Jr. Memorial Lecturer at the Soil Science Society of America Annual Meeting, Houston, TX 2006. Distinguished Research Professor Award, Florida State University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Oceanography |
Institutions | Florida State University |
Thesis | Sulfur mass balance and isotopic fractionation in an anoxic marine sediment (1985) |