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D-Index & Metrics

Earth Science

D-Index
59
Citations
13445
World Ranking
2005
National Ranking
871

Overview

Max Coleman is affiliated with the Jet Propulsion Lab in the United States, contributing primarily to the fields of Physics and Astronomy. Their research spans multiple subfields, including Astronomy and Astrophysics, Orthopedics and Sports Medicine, Atmospheric Science, Ecology, and Environmental Engineering.

The scientist's work covers diverse topics such as Planetary Science and Exploration, Geology and Paleoclimatology Research, CO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions, Sports Injuries and Prevention, Sports Performance and Training, Children's Physical and Motor Development, and Paleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils.

Among their recent scholarly publications are:

  • Mars is a mirror - Understanding the Pahrump Hills mudstones from a perspective of Earth analogues, 2022, Sedimentology
  • Multiple nutritional strategies of hydrothermal vent shrimp (Rimicaris hybisae) assemblages at the Mid-Cayman Rise, 2022, Deep Sea Research Part I Oceanographic Research Papers
  • Evaporitic-lacustrine mudstone laminites and prodelta mudlobes - continuity and change in the Hartmann's Valley interval, Murray formation, Gale crater, Mars, 2024, Sedimentology
  • Mineral alteration in water-saturated liquid CO2 on early Mars, 2024, Nature Geoscience
  • Myoelectric activity during electromagnetic resistance alone and in combination with variable resistance or eccentric overload, 2023, Scientific Reports

Frequent co-authors associated with their work include:

  • Jüergen Schieber
  • Kevin M. Bohacs
  • D. L. Bish
  • L. M. Thompson
  • W. Rapin

The scientist publishes often in venues such as Abstracts with programs - Geological Society of America, Sedimentology, Deep Sea Research Part I Oceanographic Research Papers, Nature Geoscience, and the International Journal of Exercise Science.

Best Publications

  • Isotopic evidence for source of diagenetic carbonates formed during burial of organic-rich sediments

    Hilary Irwin;Charles Curtis;Max Coleman

  • Reduction of water with zinc for hydrogen isotope analysis

    Max L. Coleman;Thomas J. Shepherd;John J. Durham;John E. Rouse

  • Reduction of Fe(III) in sediments by sulphate-reducing bacteria

    Max L. Coleman;David B. Hedrick;Derek R. Lovley;David C. White;David C. White

  • Geochemistry of diagenetic non-silicate minerals: kinetic considerations

    M. L. Coleman

  • Pore water evolution during sediment burial from isotopic and mineral chemistry of calcite, dolomite and siderite concretions

    C.D. Curtis;M.L. Coleman;L.G. Love

  • Controls on development and diversity of Early Archean stromatolites

    Abigail C. Allwood;John P. Grotzinger;Andrew Herbert Knoll;Ian W. Burch

  • Changes in Carbon and Oxygen Isotope Composition during Limestone Diagenesis

    J. A. D. Dickson;M. L. Coleman

  • Coupling between sulfur recycling and syndepositional carbonate dissolution: evidence from oxygen and sulfur isotope composition of pore water sulfate, South Florida Platform, U.S.A.

    T.C.W. Ku;L.M. Walter;M.L. Coleman;R.E. Blake

  • Direct reduction of sulfates to sulfate dioxide for isotopic analysis

    Max L. Coleman;Michael P. Moore

  • Formation of siderite-Mg-calcite-iron sulphide concretions in intertidal marsh and sandflat sediments, north Norfolk, England

    K. Pye;J. A. D. Dickson;N. Schiavon;M. L. Coleman

  • Microbial processes: Controls on the shape and composition of carbonate concretions

    Max L. Coleman

  • Carbon, oxygen and sulphur isotope variations in concretions from the Upper Lias of N.E. England

    M.L Coleman;R Raiswell

  • Fe-sulphate-rich evaporative mineral precipitates from the Río Tinto, southwest Spain

    T. Buckby;S. Black;Max Laurence Coleman;M. E. Hodson

  • Cyanobacterial key to the genesis of micritic and peloidal limestones in ancient seas

    J Kazmierczak;M L Coleman;M Gruszczynski;S Kempe

  • Zinc homeostasis in man: studies using a new stable isotope-dilution technique

    M. J. Jackson;D. A. Jones;R. H. T. Edwards;I. G. Swainbank

  • Diverse styles of submarine venting on the ultraslow spreading Mid-Cayman Rise

    C.R. German;A. Bowen;M.L. Coleman;D.L. Honig

  • Geochemistry of inorganic and organic sulphur in organic-rich sediments from the Peru Margin

    Jean-Remi Mossmann;Andrew C Aplin;Charles D Curtis;Max L Coleman

  • A cross-calibration of chlorine isotopic measurements and suitability of seawater as the international reference material

    Arnaud Godon;Nathalie Jendrzejewski;Hans G.M Eggenkamp;Hans G.M Eggenkamp;David A Banks

  • A simple three-dimensional model of diffusion-with-precipitation applied to localised pyrite formation in framboids, fossils and detrital iron minerals

    R Raiswell;K Whaler;S Dean;M.L Coleman

  • Dissolution and Recrystallization in Modern Shelf Carbonates: Evidence from Pore Water and Solid Phase Chemistry: Discussion

    Lynn M. Walter;Steven A. Bischof;William P. Patterson;Timothy W. Lyons

  • Formation of fossil hydrothermal chimneys and mounds from Silvermines, Ireland

    A. J. Boyce;M. L. Coleman;M. J. Russell

Frequent Co-Authors

Jon Gluyas
Jon Gluyas Durham University
Magali Ader
Magali Ader Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
Julie A. Huber
Julie A. Huber Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Andrew C. Aplin
Andrew C. Aplin Durham University
Jeffrey S. Seewald
Jeffrey S. Seewald Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Benjamin Brunner
Benjamin Brunner The University of Texas at El Paso
Sean P. Sylva
Sean P. Sylva Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Stuart Black
Stuart Black University of Reading
Carlo Doglioni
Carlo Doglioni National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology
Stewart J. Clark
Stewart J. Clark Durham University

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