World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Earth Science

D-Index
64
Citations
12582
World Ranking
1526
National Ranking
679

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2012 - Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • 2011 - Fellow of American Geophysical Union (AGU)
  • 2004 - Fellow of John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation

Overview

Eugene W. Domack was affiliated with the University of South Florida in the United States. Their research spanned multiple scientific fields, primarily focusing on Engineering and Earth and Planetary Sciences. Within these broad areas, their work concentrated on subfields such as Ocean Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Atmospheric Science, Paleontology, and Geophysics.

Their scholarly output included studies and data contributions related to drilling and well engineering, reservoir engineering and simulation methods, hydraulic fracturing and reservoir analysis, paleontology and stratigraphy of fossils, geological and geochemical analysis, geological and geophysical studies, and cryospheric studies and observations.

Frequent collaborators included Angelo Camerlenghi, P. F. Barker, Gary D. Acton, Stefanie Brachfeld, and Ellen A. Cowan.

Domack published in several scientific venues, with multiple contributions to OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University) and Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research). Other publication venues included Earth-Science Reviews and Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Climate Change.

Recent papers authored by or involving Domack comprised the following:

  • Snowballs in Africa: sectioning a long-lived Neoproterozoic carbonate platform and its bathyal foreslope (NW Namibia), 2021, Earth-Science Reviews
  • Antarctic ecosystem responses following ice-shelf collapse and iceberg calving: Science review and future research, 2020, Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Climate Change
  • ODP Leg 178, Hole 1103A - Well Logging Data, 2021, OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University)
  • ODP Leg 178, Hole 1096C - Well Logging Data, 2021, Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
  • ODP Leg 178, Hole 1095B - Well Logging Data, 2021, OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (La Trobe University)

Eugene W. Domack received recognition as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2012 and was also a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union since 2011. Earlier, in 2004, they were named a Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

Best Publications

  • Stability of the Larsen B ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula during the Holocene epoch

    Eugene Domack;Diana Duran;Amy Leventer;Scott Ishman

  • Marine Ecosystem Sensitivity to Climate Change

    Raymond C. Smith;David Ainley;Karen Baker;Eugene Domack

  • Late Pleistocene–Holocene retreat of the West Antarctic Ice-Sheet system in the Ross Sea: Part 1—Geophysical results

    Stephanie Ship;John Anderson;Eugene Domack

  • Glacial and glacial marine sediments of the Antarctic continental shelf

    J. B. Anderson;D. D. Kurtz;E. W. Domack;K. M. Balshaw

  • Late Pleistocene–Holocene retreat of the West Antarctic Ice-Sheet system in the Ross Sea: Part 2—Sedimentologic and stratigraphic signature

    Eugene W. Domack;Erik A. Jacobson;Stephanie Shipp;John B. Anderson

  • A community-based geological reconstruction of Antarctic Ice Sheet deglaciation since the Last Glacial Maximum

    Michael J Bentley;Colm Ó Cofaigh;John B Anderson;Howard Conway

  • Chronology of the Palmer Deep site, Antarctic Peninsula: a Holocene palaeoenvironmental reference for the circum-Antarctic

    E. Domack;A. Leventer;R. Dunbar;F. Taylor

  • Productivity cycles of 200–300 years in the Antarctic Peninsula region: Understanding linkages among the sun, atmosphere, oceans, sea ice, and biota

    Amy Leventer;Eugene W. Domack;Scott E. Ishman;Stefanie Brachfeld

  • Are basal Ediacaran (635 Ma) post-glacial “cap dolostones” diachronous?

    Paul F. Hoffman;Galen P. Halverson;Eugene W. Domack;Jonathan M. Husson

  • Mechanisms of Holocene palaeoenvironmental change in the Antarctic Peninsula region

    M. J. Bentley;D. A. Hodgson;J. A. Smith;C. Ó. Cofaigh

  • Holocene Southern Ocean surface temperature variability west of the Antarctic Peninsula

    Amelia E. Shevenell;A. E. Ingalls;E. W. Domack;C. Kelly

  • Retreat of the East Antarctic ice sheet during the last glacial termination

    Andrew Mackintosh;Nicholas Golledge;Eugene Domack;Robert Dunbar

  • Oceanographic Influences on Sedimentation Along the Antarctic Continental Shelf

    Robert B. Dunbar;John B. Anderson;Eugene W. Domack;Stanley S. Jacobs

  • Rapid bedrock uplift in the Antarctic Peninsula explained by viscoelastic response to recent ice unloading

    Grace A. Nield;Valentina Roberta Barletta;Andrea Bordoni;Matt A. King

  • Late Quaternary glacial history, flow dynamics and sedimentation along the eastern margin of the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet

    Jeffrey Evans;Carol J. Pudsey;Colm ÓCofaigh;Peter Morris

  • Problems and Possible Solutions Concerning Radiocarbon Dating of Surface Marine Sediments, Ross Sea, Antarctica

    John T. Andrews;Eugene W. Domack;Wendy L. Cunningham;Amy Leventer

  • Oceanographic and physiographic controls on modern sedimentation within Antarctic fjords

    Eugene W. Domack;Scott Ishman

  • Evidence for an earliest Oligocene ice sheet on the Antarctic Peninsula

    Linda C. Ivany;Stefaan Van Simaeys;Eugene W. Domack;Scott D. Samson

  • Holocene paleoclimate change in the Antarctic Peninsula: evidence from the diatom, sedimentary and geochemical record

    F Taylor;JM Whitehead;E Domack

  • Reconstruction of ice-sheet changes in the Antarctic Peninsula since the Last Glacial Maximum

    Colm Ó Cofaigh;Bethan J. Davies;Stephen J. Livingstone;James A. Smith

  • Antarctic Peninsula climate variability : historical and paleoenvironmental perspectives

    Eugene Domack;Amy Leventer;Adam Burnett;Robert Bindschadler

  • Glacier-Influenced Sedimentation on High-Latitude Continental Margins

    Eugene Domack

Frequent Co-Authors

Amy Leventer
Amy Leventer Colgate University
Stefanie Brachfeld
Stefanie Brachfeld Montclair State University
John B. Anderson
John B. Anderson Rice University
Robert Gilbert
Robert Gilbert Queen's University
Robert B. Dunbar
Robert B. Dunbar Stanford University
Angelo Camerlenghi
Angelo Camerlenghi National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics
Miquel Canals
Miquel Canals University of Barcelona
Craig R. Smith
Craig R. Smith University of Hawaii at Manoa
Michele Rebesco
Michele Rebesco National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics
Jeffrey Evans
Jeffrey Evans Loughborough University

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Best Scientists Citing Eugene W. Domack