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Investigating the effect of oil spills
on the environment and public health.
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Greg Ellis

University of South Florida

College of Marine Science

140 7th Ave South
St. Petersburg , FL  33701  

gellis@mail.usf.edu

Project List:

Center for the Integrated Modeling and Analysis of Gulf Ecosystems II (C-IMAGE II)

Year 5-7 Consortia Grants (RFP-IV)Role: Research Staff

Assessing the Concentration and the Molecular and Isotropic Composition of Deep sea Submerged Oils in the Northern Gulf of Mexico

Year One Block Grant - Florida Institute of OceanographyRole: Research Staff

Publications & Presentations:

Journal Article - 1

2015

Romero, I. C., Schwing, P. T., Brooks, G. R., Larson, R. A., Hastings, D. W., Ellis, G., et al. (2015). Hydrocarbons in Deep-Sea Sediments following the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Blowout in the Northeast Gulf of Mexico. PLoS ONE, 10(5), e0128371.

Conference Presentations - 2

2011

Hollander, D., Freeman, K., Ellis, G., Diefendorf, A., Goddard, E., Peebles, E., et al. (2011). Why subsurface oils associated with the BP Deepwater Horizon blowout are so long-lived and remain toxic?: A molecular organic geochemical perspective. In Gordon Research Conference on Chemical Oceanography. August 2011.
Hollander, D., Freeman, K., Ellis, G., Diefendorf, A., Peebles, E., & Paul, J. (2011). Long-Lived, Sub-Surface Layers of Toxic Oil in the Deep-Sea: A Molecular Organic and Isotopic Geochemical Approach to Understanding their Nature, Molecular Distribution, Origin and Impacts to the Northern Gulf of Mexico. In American Geophysical Union National Meeting. San Francisco, CA, December 2011.