
It is my honor to introduce Gabriel Bowen, a recipient of the 2012 James B. Macelwane Medal. Gabe is a talented geochemist and geologist who is being recognized for his prolific contributions across a broad range of disciplines including hydrology, ecology, biogeochemistry, forensic anthropology, and paleoclimatology. His primary contributions to these disciplines have come largely through the creative use of stable isotope tracers in combination with numerical modeling.
Gabe’s potential was evident from an early stage. As an undergraduate at the University of Michigan under the tutelage of Bruce Wilkinson and K. C. Lohmann, he developed a statistical model to produce the first detailed map of the oxygen isotopic composition of precipitation on a global scale. This initial experience set Gabe on a career path that would soon lead him to the forefront of Earth sciences, tackling questions on the dynamics of Earth’s climate, geochemical cycles, and biosphere, both past and present. His first stop was the University of California, Santa Cruz, where with Paul Koch and myself, he took on one of the more prominent questions of the time, how transient global warming at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary contributed to the major radiation of land mammals. His research, which involved three years of challenging field sampling and lab work, ultimately proved that the earliest ancestors of several major modern orders of mammals originated in Asia. It was at this time that Gabe’s full range of talents became apparent. Because this work hinged largely on carbon isotope stratigraphy, with minimal guidance, he modified a version of the Walker-Kasting carbon cycle model to quantitatively assess how in a rapidly warming climate, changes in plant and soil respiration rates influence the fractionation of carbon isotopes between the atmosphere and continental carbon reservoirs.
For his postdoctoral research, Gabe moved on to Utah where he, along with James Ehleringer and others, began pioneering work to solidify the foundation for applying the spatiotemporal isotope patterns in meteoric water to a broad scope of questions. This included expansion of the existing precipitation database through the clever use of substitute tap and ground water samples, and the initial development of integrated isomapping tools. Gabe understood how such a well-documented and accessible database could be used to advance many disciplines, and took the lead in a community effort to develop the online application “Isoscapes.” Utilizing this capability, he and his colleagues performed a comprehensive analysis, which verified the influence of temperature and precipitation intensity on the seasonal patterns in isotopes within specific geographic zones. This was a significant advance in applying proxy isotope records to reconstruct past variations in seasonality. Gabe also contributed to the design of a strategy utilizing O and D/H isotopes as a means of determining origin and migration of animals.
In this era of specialization, Gabe is among a select group of talented young scientists who possess the creativity, breadth and skills to tackle a wide range of interdisciplinary problems. He is a reminder of how a broad foundation in Earth sciences can facilitate solutions to some of the more challenging problems of our time.
–James Zachos, University of California, Santa Cruz, California

Land surface models (LSMs) play a crucial role in elucidating water and carbon cycles by simulating processes such as plant transpiration and evapo...


