Department
Geosciences
Organization
University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Email
jbg92@umass.edu

Location

Amherst , Massachusetts 01003
United States

Bio

Dr. Brigham-Grette has been on the faculty at UMass since 1987. Her research interests are on the stratigraphy, sedimentology, and chronology of geologic systems that record the climate evolution and sea level history of the Arctic over the past 3.5 Million years, when CO2 in the atmosphere was ~400 ppm. Her research program is largely aimed at documenting the global context of ancient environmental change across Beringia, i.e., the Bering Land Bridge, stretching across the western Arctic from Alaska and the Yukon into northeastern Russia and adjacent marginal seas. Brigham-Grette is the U.S. Chief Scientist of the Elgygytgyn Lake Scientific Drilling project, a multinational program leading to the first unprecedented recovery of a 3.6 million year old record of Arctic paleoclimate in 2009. She has also been studying with her graduate students evidence of past sea ice changes and paleoceanography across the Arctic-Pacific gateway. Since 2005, she has collaborated with colleagues at Northern Illinois University conducting a research program for undergraduate students on the massive retreat of Svalbard tidewater glaciers.

Interests

Sea Ice

Science Specialties

Paleoclimate

Current Research

My research interests are focused on the stratigraphy, sedimentology, and chronology of geologic systems that record the climate evolution and sea level history of the Arctic since the mid-Pliocene. Most of my research program is aimed at documenting the global context of paleoenvironmental change across “Beringia”, i.e., the Bering Land Bridge, stretching across the western Arctic from Alaska and the Yukon into NE Russia including the adjacent marginal seas. Starting 3 decades ago with fieldwork on the sea level history and glacial stratigraphy of vast Arctic coastal plains and coastal environments in comparison with regional alpine glaciation, I am now focused on the integration of records from marine and lacustrine systems.