Professor Catalano investigates geochemical processes that control mineralogy and trace metal cycling in aquatic systems on Earth and elsewhere in the Solar System.
The Aqueous Geochemistry and Mineralogy Group, led by Professor Jeff Catalano, studies the geochemistry and mineralogy of terrestrial and planetary aquatic systems. Our interests span the fields of Environmental Biogeochemistry, Planetary Geochemistry, and Geobiology. The group investigates processes that control the distribution and cycling of major and trace elements in modern and ancient systems. These processes are controlled by chemical interactions between water and rocks, organic matter, and organisms. The goal of the group is to understand geochemical phenomena such as biogeochemical element cycling, contaminant fate, and mineral weathering and transformations on Earth, Mars, and other planetary bodies. To accomplish these goals we apply laboratory-based analytical and microscopy tools, synchrotron-based X-ray spectroscopic and scattering methods, and geochemical modeling techniques.
To learn more about the laboratory's current research projects, visit the laboratory website.