Rob Rye’s Curriculum Vitae Page 1 of 5

Curriculum Vitae for

Rob Rye

University of Southern California

Department of Earth Sciences

Los Angeles, CA 90089-0740

Phone (213) 821-2267

FAX: (213) 740-8801

EDUCATION

Harvard University, Ph. D. in Geology. March 1999.

Dissertation: Soil-Atmosphere Relationships Until the Rise of Oxygen.

Advisor: Heinrich D. Holland

Stanford University, A.B. in History, 1990.

EXPERIENCE

Research Assistant Professor of Earth Sciences, University of Southern California, October 2001 to present.

Lead Scientist of Geology and Biology Components of Virtual Planetary Laboratory, NAI node based at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, March 2001 to present.

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Biology, California State University of Northridge, October 2000 to January 2003.

Senior Research Assistant, California Institute of Technology, May 2001 to September 2001.

Postdoctoral Scholar of Geobiology, California Institute of Technology, May 1999 to May 2001.

Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard University, February 1999 to May 1999.

Graduate Fellow, Harvard University, August 1992 to January 1999

Teaching Fellow, Harvard University, 5 semesters September 1992 to January 1998

Research Assistant, to Prof. Aaron Wildavsky, University of California, Berkeley, Survey Research Center, June 1991 to August 1992.

Stable Isotope Lab Manager Yale University, August 1990 to June 1991.

PUBLICATIONS

Holland, H.D., P.H. Kuo, and R.O. Rye., 1994, O2 and CO2 in the late Archaean and early Proterozoic atmosphere, V. M. Goldschmidt Conference extended abstracts, Mineralogical Magazine, 58A, 424-425.

Rye, R., P.H. Kuo, and H.D. Holland, 1995, Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations before 2.2 billion years ago, Nature, 378, 603-605.

Tanaka, N., D.M. Rye, R. Rye, H. Avak, and T. Yoshinari, 1995, High precision mass spectrometric analysis of isotopic abundance ratios in nitrous oxide by direct injection of N2O, International Journal of Mass Spectrometry and Ion Processes, 142, 163-175.

Rye, R.O. and A. Wildavsky, 1995, CFCs and ozone depletion: Are they as bad as people think?, chapter 10 in But is it True? A Citizen's Guide to Environmental Health and Safety Issues by Aaron Wildavsky: Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, p. 304-339.

Rye, R.O. and A. Wildavsky, 1995, Detecting Errors in Environmental and Safety Studies, chapter 14 in But is it True? A Citizen's Guide to Environmental Health and Safety Issues by Aaron Wildavsky: Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, p. 410-426.

Rye, R.O. and A. Wildavsky, 1995, The effects of acid rain on the United States (with and excursion to Europe), chapter 9 in But is it True? A Citizen's Guide to Environmental Health and Safety Issues by Aaron Wildavsky: Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, p. 274-303.

Holland, H.D. and R. Rye., 1997, Evidence in pre-2.2 Ga paleosols for the early evolution of atmospheric oxygen and terrestrial biota: Comment and Reply, Geology, 25, 857-858.

Rye, R., 1998, Highly negative 13C values in organic carbon in the Mt. Roe #2 paleosol: terrestrial life at 2.765 Ga, Mineralogical Magazine, 62A, 1308-1309.

Steefel, C.I. and R. Rye, 1998, Constraints on Archaean and Palaeoproterozoic pO2 levels based on multicomponent reactive transport modeling of chemical weathering in the Hekpoort palaeosol, Mineralogical Magazine, 62A, 1447-1448.

Rye, R. and H.D. Holland, 1998, Paleosols and the evolution of atmospheric oxygen: A critical review, American Journal of Science, 298, 621-672.

Rye, R. and H.D. Holland, 2000, Geology and geochemistry of paleosols developed on the Hekpoort Basalt, Pretoria Group, South Africa, American Journal of Science, 300, 85-141.

Rye, R. and H.D. Holland, 2000, Life associated with the 2.76 billion year old Mt. Roe #2 paleosol, Western Australia, Geology, 28, 483-486.

Yang, W., H.D. Holland and R. Rye, 2002, Evidence for low or no oxygen in the late Archean atmosphere from the ~2.76 Ga Mt. Roe #2 paleosol, Western Australia: Part 3 Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 66, 3707-3718.

Nealson, K.H. and R. Rye, 2003, Evolution of metabolism, in Turekian, K.K. and H.D. Holland (Eds.), Treatise on Geochemistry: Volume 8 Biogeochemistry William H. Schlesinger, ed.) Pergamon Press, Oxford, 41-61.

Baross, J., K.H. Nealson, R. Rye, Potential atmospheric biosignatures on Mars, Proceedings for the MACA Workshop Dec 2001.

Lüttge, A., R. Rye, and P.G. Conrad (eds.): Quantitative Approaches towards Biogeochemistry: Processes, Scaling, and Interfaces:American Journal of Science v. 300(6-8), 449-873.

Rye, R. and V.S. Meadows, Modeling of Extrasolar Planets, Astrobiology 5, 212.

Rye, R. and C.I. Steefel, 2006, Atmospheric oxygen and Proterozoic paleosols: Lowering the limits, in preparation, to be submitted to Nature

ABSTRACTS

Rye, R. “An upper limit on early atmospheric carbon dioxide levels,” Colston Research Symposium on The History of Degassing of the Earth, August 29-31, University of Bristol, England, 1996.

Rye, R. and H.D. Holland. “Carbon dioxide, methane, and oxygen in the early atmosphere,” Geological Society of America, Annual Meeting, 1996.

Rye, R. “Major element distribution in two cores through the Hekpoort paleosol,” Geological Society of America, Annual Meeting, 1997.

Rye, R. “Evidence of Archean (2.75 Ga) terrestrial life in Mt. Roe #2 paleosol,” Geological Society of America, Annual Meeting, 1998.

Rye, R. “Major and trace element abundance data in the ca. 2.2 Ga Hekpoort paleosol,” V.M. Goldschmidt Conference, 1999.

Rye, R., “A Possible Archean Climate Feedback,” Geological Society of America, Annual Meeting, 2001.

Rye, R. and M. Storrie-Lombardi “Toward a Model for Detecting Life on Extrasolar Planets” Eos Trans. AGU 82(47), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract P22B-0553, 2001

Anbar, A.D., R. Rye, A.J. Kaufman, “Explaining the Paleoproterozoic Rise of O2” Eos Trans. AGU 82(47), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract P21C-09, 2001

Anbar, A.D., G.L. Arnold, R. Rye, S. Weyer, “Iron isotopes in an Archean paleosol” V. M. Goldschmidt Conference, 2002.

Steefel, C.I., R. Rye, B.F. Turner, S.L. Brantley, “Interpretation of weathering profiles from the Paleo-Proterozoic and present using reactive transport modeling,” V.M. Goldschmidt Conference, 2002.

Souza-Egipsy, V., F. Corsetti, K.H. Nealson, R. Rye “Abiogenic layered carbonates associated with serpentinization: Why Martian stromatolites might not be fossils” Third European Workshop on Exo/Astrobiology –Mars, 2003.

Crisp, D. et al (including R. Rye), “The astronomical detection of biosignatures on extrasolar terrestrial planets: the Virtual Planetary Laboratory” Annual Meeting of the Division of Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society, 2003.

Meadows, V.S., R. Rye et al. “Biogeochemical cycles and the search for life beyond the solar system” Eos Trans. AGU 84(46), Fall Meet. Suppl. Abstract U52C-08, 2003.

Meadows, V., Rye, R., “Atmospheric Planetary Science Database for Astrobiology” NASA Astrobiology Institute Executive Council Retreat, Jackson Hole, October 2003.

Johnson, O.J., R. Rye et al. “Microbial ecology of ultrabasic springs on the actively serpentinizing Cedars Peridotite, Sonoma County, California” Southern California Geobiology Symposium, Caltech, 2004.

Rye, R., O.J. Johnson, K.H. Nealson “Biology and water chemistry of several hyperalkaline springs emerging from mantle-like rock” Astrobiology Science Conference, NASA Ames, 2004.

MISSION INVOLVEMENT

Led mission planning for astrobiological studies in the proposed 2007 Scout mission, MARVEL (PI: Mark Allen). Mission placed 2nd in competition. Will now recompete for 2011 time slot. Duties in this area will include 1) an assessment of the likely limits of life on Mars as set by data available prior to the arrival of the MARVEL package; 2) estimation of likely maxima for fluxes of potential biogenic gases in both subsurface and endolithic communities based upon such fluxes in terrestrial systems; 3) providing recommendations re: gases of likely astrobiological interest, given results of tasks 1) and 2).

OTHER RELEVANT EXPERIENCE

  • NASA Exobiology Review Panel: Member 1999-2001
  • Lunar and Planetary Science Conference Program Committee: Member 2000
  • Mars Atmospheric Chemistry and Astrobiology Workshop: Rapporteur for Biosignatures Session, 2001
  • NASA ASTEP Review Panel: Member 2002
  • Chaired ‘Co-evolution of the biosphere and geosphere’ session of Origins of Life Gordon Conference 2002
  • Chaired ‘Earth History’ session of Origins of Life Gordon Conference 2005
  • Editor of upcoming special volume of American Journal of Science on Biogeochemistry (due out in 2005)

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

Geochemical Society

American Geophysical Union