Assistants:
Geochemist using stable isotopes to study how microbes catalyze chemical reactions and shape the chemistry of our atmosphere and oceans.
Research Interests
The Ono laboratory for stable isotope geochemistry studies how microbes catalyze chemical reactions and shape the chemistry of our atmosphere and oceans.
Our laboratory has explored the early evolution of atmospheric oxygen using stable sulfur isotope systems and developed a novel tool to pinpoint the origin of methane, significant long-lived greenhouse gas, and a key biosignature gas for space exploration.
Our approach has always combined theoretical, experimental, and observational studies to answer significant questions in Earth science using stable isotopes as a versatile tool. We apply our tools to a broad range of problems in both low- and high-temperature geochemistry.
Biographic Sketch
Shuhei Ono holds a BSc in Geology from Waseda University, Tokyo, and a PhD in Geochemistry from Pennsylvania State University (2001). After postdoctoral research at the Geophysical Laboratory of Carnegie Institution of Washington, he joined the EAPS faculty in 2007.
Key Awards & Honors
- 2022 • Teaching with Digital Technology Award, MIT Open Learning
- 2017 • Paul Gast Lectureship, European Association of Geochemistry
- 2011 • Top-50 most cited articles, Geochimica Cosmochimica Acta, Elsevier
- 2001 • Kerr-McKee Career Development Professorship Chair, MIT
- 2006 • Jubilee Medal, Geological Society of South Africa