click on a letter below to browse by last name
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
<<return to faculty search page
Robert B. Jackson
Title(s): Nicholas Professor of Global Environmental Change,
Primary Division: Earth & Ocean Sciences
Phone: (919) 660-7408
Fax: 919-681-7176
E-mail: jackson@duke.edu
Statement of Expertise: how people affect the Earth
Link to full bio
Sonke Johnsen
Title(s): Assistant Professor of Biology
Primary Division: Marine Science & Conservation
Phone: (919) 660-7321
Fax: 919-660-7293
E-mail: sjohnsen@duke.edu
Statement of Expertise: aspects of visual ecology
Link to full bio
Timothy L. Johnson
Title(s): Adjunct Professor
Primary Division: Earth & Ocean Sciences
Phone: (919) 541-0575
Fax: (919) 541-7885
E-mail: johnson.tim@epa.gov
Primary Area of Expertise: energy
Secondary Areas of Expertise: decision analysis, environmental economics, environmental policy, geospatial technologies, global climate change, land use and sprawl
Statement of Expertise: regional energy planning, sustainable energy system design, smart growth and land use change, energy modeling, and geographic data anlysis
Link to full bio
Zackary I Johnson
Title(s): Assistant Professor of Biological Oceanography and Marine Biotechnology
Primary Division: Marine Science & Conservation
Phone: 252-504-7543
Fax: 252-504-7648
E-mail: zij@duke.edu
Statement of Expertise: marine microbes (focusing on cyanobacteria/Prochlorococcus), biogeochemistry (carbon fluxes focusing on photosynthesis), biological oceanography, marine biotechnology.
Link to full bio
David W. Johnston
Title(s): Research Scientist and Resident Faculty
Primary Division: Marine Science & Conservation
Phone: (252) 504-7593
Fax: 252-504-7648
E-mail: david.johnston@duke.edu
Statement of Expertise: marine conservation and ecology, with focus on oceanography, climate change, marine protected areas and population assessments.
Link to full bio
"I pick what I know to be important problems -- the places around the world where biodiversity is being lost most rapidly -- and then worry about what I can do about it...that's why I'm at the Nicholas School. It's a problem--not discipline--oriented group. One dedicated to solving the serious problems facing the environment. The school's faculty has a huge array of talents and experiences that can be brought to bear on these problems."
--Stuart L. Pimm,
Doris Duke Professor of Conservation Ecology