Associate Professor and
Coordinator of Undergraduate Programs
Ph.D., University of California-Riverside, 1992

The Environmental Geochemistry Research Group conducts innovative research on the biogeochemistry of near-surface environments, including soils, wetlands, aquatic sediments, aquifers, and the coastal margin. We are focused on biogeochemical processes that mediate the interactions between human society and ecosystems, including the fate and bioavailability of contaminants, natural and human perturbations of nutrient and organic carbon, and human impacts on ecosystem functioning.

As such, our research group studies geoscience at the interface between biogeochemistry, geomorphology and landscape ecology.

M.T. Halbouty Building, Room 257

Geology & Geophysics, TAMU
College Station, TX 77843-3115

herbert@geo.tamu.edu
(Phone) 979-845-2405
(Fax) 979-845-6162


Herbert Home Page

Thesis Templates and Style Manuals:

Forms are available in Microsoft Word or Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF). You can download the latest PDF viewer at www.adobe.com

Bruce Herbert collecting soil in the blackland praries east of Austin Texas. Helping is Dr. Mark Schlautman, Professor of Environmental Engineering at Clemson University. Mark is a good friend except when he is sitting down on the job.


 Page updated on December 6, 2001