Julie Bryce

Julie Bryce

Professor
Phone: (603) 862-3139
Office: James Hall, Room 308, Durham, NH 03824
Pronouns: She/Her/Hers

  • My primary research interests lie in the application of trace elemental and isotope geochemistry to time and track processes in Earth Surface and Deep Earth environments. We do not discriminate these applications based on temperature windows found in the Earth System. In addition to studying how elements and isotopes cycle through the Earth system, we also have projects collaboratively with faculty in other disciplines. For example with Archaeologists we are using these techniques to address important questions reconstructing societal dynamics of earlier civilizations and the interactions of earlier populations with their hosting environment. With microbiologists and ecologists we are working to understand linkages between geochemical and environmental conditions and community dynamics.

    Here are several ongoing projects that fit under this large umbrella (listed along a quasi-increasing temperature gradient):
  • Tracking Earth system processes with trace element and Rb-Sr, Sm-Nd, Lu-Hf, U-Th-Pb isotopic systems
  • Magma assembly beneath complex volcanic systems
  • Microbial contributions to bioweathering and nutrient allocation in plants across geologic gradients
  • Tracking and assessing mercury dynamics in thawing Arctic and changing temperate wetlands
  • Geochemical assessment of Arctic climate change
  • Environmental controls on geogenic arsenic in New England groundwater drinking supplies
  • Rare earth elements (REEs) as proxies for phosphate weathering
  • Hydrothermal vent chemistry
  • Chemical structure of the mantle

 

The geochemistry group uses the UNH Clean lab, a ~ 1300 square foot (~120 square meter) space in James Hall outfitted with minimal exposed metal, Class 10,000 general spaces and Class 1,000 workstations. The clean lab is designed with nested rooms allowing for physical as well as air supply separation of different applications subject to contamination from other procedures. In this space we prepare samples and purify elements for further analysis (Mg, Sr, rare earth elements, Nd, Hf, U-Th-Pb).

Our instrumentation is housed in the UNH plasma lab and includes a Nu instruments AttoM high resolution single-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer and a Nu plasma II-ES multicollector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer. For sample introduction, the plasma geochemistry lab also includes two lasers (a 193 nm photon machines Excite excimer laser and a New Wave 213 nm deep UV laser), desolvating nebulizers and two hydride generators + cold vapor introduction systems (one typically dated for hydride generation for arsenic applications and a second typically run in cold vapor for mercury analyses). We maintain and operate a Milestone direct mercury analysis instrument for mercury analysis in solids via thermal decomposition.

Both the UNH Clean lab and the UNH plasma lab include exhausting polypropylene laminar flow hoods, polypropylene laminar flow workstations, centrifuges, balances, ultrasonicating mixers, water polisher systems capable of achieving 18MO•cm DI water and Teflon-coated hot plates. Our in situ work is supported by petrographic microscopes, ‘picking’ scopes with variable zoom ranges and rock preparation facilities available through the Department of Earth Sciences.

We are happy to welcome collaborative or contract studies into our geochemical laboratories. For additional information, discussion of applications, including our approved billing rates, please contact me.


Service

Associate Editor, G-cubed.
Technical Reviewer (many journals; NSF, USGS proposals) and Review Panel member (NSF)
UNH service- Department Chair (2012-2018, with sabbatical 2016-2017) and associated membership of the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences Executive Committee; Undergraduate Coordinator (2018 -2024 ); Faculty Fellow in t

Courses Taught

  • ESCI 401: Dynamic Earth
  • ESCI 451: Earth in Film
  • ESCI 741/841: Geochemistry
  • ESCI 745/845: Isotope Geochemistry
  • ESCI 795/995: Topics
  • ESCI 796: Topics/Magma Geochemistry
  • ESCI 796/996: Topics/Arctic Seminar
  • ESCI 896: Topics/Magmatic Processes
  • INCO 590: Student Research Experience
  • INCO 790: Advanced Research Experience

Education

  • Ph.D., Geological Sciences, University of California - Santa Barbara
  • B.A., Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia

Selected Publications

  • Buchbinder, O., Abrams, E., Britton, D., Bryce, J., Couse, L., McGaughy, J., & Rock, B. (2022). The Research and Engagement Academy: A Model for STEM Faculty Development. In S. Linder, C. Lee, S. Stefl, & K. High (Eds.), Handbook of STEM Faculty Development (pp. 279-290). USA: Information Age Publishing, Inc.

  • Zheng, X. -Y., Beard, B. L., Neuman, M., Fahnestock, M. F., Bryce, J. G., & Johnson, C. M. (2022). Stable potassium (K) isotope characteristics at mid-ocean ridge hydrothermal vents and its implications for the global K cycle. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 593. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2022.117653

  • Ennis, N. J., Dharumadurai, D., Sevigny, J. L., Wilmot, R., Alnaimat, S. M., Bryce, J. G., . . . Tisa, L. S. (2022). Draft Genomes Sequences of 11 Geodermatophilaceae Strains Isolated from Building Stones from New England and Indian Stone Ruins found at historic sites in Tamil Nadu, India.. J Genomics, 10, 69-77. doi:10.7150/jgen.76121

  • Brombin, V., Pettitt, E. A., Fahnestock, M. F., Casalini, M., Webb, L. E., Bryce, J. G., & Bianchini, G. (2021). New geochemical and geochronological data on the Cenozoic Veneto Volcanic Province: Geodynamic inferences. LITHOS, 406-407. doi:10.1016/j.lithos.2021.106507

  • Kempton, P. D., Spence, A., Downes, H., Blichert-Toft, J., Bryce, J. G., Hegner, E., & Vroon, P. Z. (2021). Isotopic evolution of prehistoric magma sources of Mt. Etna, Sicily: Insights from the Valle Del Bove (vol 176, 56, 2021). CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY, 176(9). doi:10.1007/s00410-021-01819-z

  • Fornari, D. J., Von Damm, K. L., Bryce, J. G., Cowen, J. P., Ferrini, V., Fundis, A., . . . White, S. M. (2012). The East Pacific Rise Between 9 degrees N and 10 degrees N: Twenty-Five Years of Integrated, Multidisciplinary Oceanic Spreading Center Studies. OCEANOGRAPHY, 25(1), 18-+. doi:10.5670/oceanog.2012.02

  • Furman, T., Kaleta, K. M., Bryce, J. G., & Hanan, B. B. (2006). Tertiary mafic lavas of Turkana, Kenya: Constraints on East African plume structure and the occurrence of high-mu volcanism in Africa. JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY, 47(6), 1221-1244. doi:10.1093/petrology/egl009

  • Furman, T., Bryce, J., Rooney, T., Hanan, B., Yirgu, G., & Ayalew, D. (2006). Heads and tails: 30 million years of the Afar plume. Geological Society London Special Publications, 259(1), 95-119. doi:10.1144/gsl.sp.2006.259.01.09

  • Bryce, J. G., DePaolo, D. J., & Lassiter, J. C. (2005). Geochemical structure of the Hawaiian plume: Sr, Nd, and Os isotopes in the 2.8 km HSDP-2 section of Mauna Kea volcano. GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 6. doi:10.1029/2004GC000809

  • Furman, T., Bryce, J. G., Karson, J., & Iotti, A. (2004). East African Rift System (EARS) plume structure: Insights from quaternary mafic lavas of Turkana, Kenya. JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY, 45(5), 1069-1088. doi:10.1093/petrology/egh004

  • Most Cited Publications