Richard H. Gammon, Ph.D. (Harvard Univ.), Professor.
gammon@macmail.chem.washington.edu. Biogeochemistry of trace gases and climate change, methyl halides, air-sea exchange, marine chemical tracers of ocean circulation and productivity, paleoatmospheric chemistry in polar ice cores, and aircraft vertical profiling of CO, H2. Participating faculty in the UW Global and Environmental Chemistry (GEC) and Astrobiology Programs, and Senior Fellow of the Joint Institute for Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean (JISAO). Professor of Chemistry and Adjunct Professor of Atmospheric Sciences.
Huang, W., X. Bu, L. Nguyen, R.H. Gammon and J.L. Bullister (submitted) Production and consumption of methyl halides in a freshwater lake. Limnology and Oceanography.
Murphy, P.P., D.E. Harrison, R.A. Feely, T. Takahashi, R.F. Weiss and R.H. Gammon (1998) Variability of delta pCO2 in the subarctic North Pacific: A comparison of results from four expeditions. Tellus 50: 185-204.
Murphy, P.P., D.E. Harrison, R.A. Feely, T. Takahashi, R.F. Weiss and R.H. Gammon (1997) Uncertainties in calculating regional fluxes for the subarctic North Pacific: Results from a study of pCO2 variability. In Tsunogai, S. (ed.) Biogeochemical Processes in the North Pacific: 80-86. Japan Marine Science Foundation.