McKinley Ocean Carbon Group

Climate is changing due to human emissions of carbon to the atmosphere. But not all the carbon emitted remains there - in fact, over the industrial era, the ocean has absorbed excess carbon equivalent to 40% of all human fossil fuel emissions. Understanding the ocean and its role in the global carbon cycle is critical to understanding and predicting climate change.

The McKinley Ocean Carbon Research Group studies how ocean physical and biogeochemical processes impact large-scale carbon cycling and primary productivity. These studies encompass climate and ocean physics, biogeochemistry and ecology. Our research tools include numerical models, oceanographic datasets, and machine learning. Current projects include:

Here’s the group in December 2024

McKinley Group AGU24

Viviana Acquaviva, Ce Bian, Galen McKinley, Thea Hatlen Heimdal, Abby Shaum, Amanda Fay (missing Lauren Moseley)

Ocean Carbon Resources

Please see our LDEO Ocean Carbon site to download data products and code.

In 2024, we developed this data story on the ocean carbon sink. Check out the cool animations created by CarbonPlan.

Previous Work

Please see our Publications for our prior work in these and other areas.