Professor Dirk Schulze-Makuch
Dirk
Schulze-Makuch, Ph.D., P.G. is Professor
at the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
at Washington State University.
Dirk grew up in Germany. He earned his B.S.
and M.S. degrees in Geology from the Justus-Liebig University
in Giessen, Germany in 1988 and 1991, respectively. After
finishing his Ph.D. in Geosciences at the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 1996, he went to work for a Princeton-based
research and consulting firm. There he worked as a Senior
Project Hydrogeologist with his major tasks being to investigate
and coordinate the remediation of hydrocarbon spills in the
subsurface. In 1997, he was appointed Adjunct Professor at the
University of Wisconsin, La Crosse. He then
joined the University of Texas at El Paso in 1998 as an Assistant
Professor with research emphasis on the transport of microbes
and chemicals in the groundwater environment, and the
interactions of microbes with their natural environment.
His research interest is in eco-hydrogeology. His
research includes a broad interdisciplinary approach and he deals with
research areas ranging from the transport of pathogens and microbes in
the subsurface and the use of reactive barriers to protect drinking
water
wells (he
holds a patent in that area) to microbial interactions with
the
natural environment and the suitability of planetary environments to
microbial colonization.
Dirk coauthored The Cosmic Zoo: Complex Life on Many Worlds,
Cosmic Biology: How Life Could Evolve on Other Worlds,
We Are Not Alone: Why We Have Already Found Extraterrestrial
Life, and
Life in the Universe: Expectations and Constraints (Advances in
Astrobiology and Biogeophysics),
The Human Mission to Mars. Colonizing the Red Planet,
coedited
A One Way Mission to Mars: Colonizing the Red Planet,
and authored the novel
Voids of Eternity: Alien Encounter.
His papers include
Scale dependency of hydraulic conductivity in heterogeneous
media,
Biologically Enhanced Energy and Carbon Cycling on
Titan?,
A Possible Biogenic Origin for Hydrogen Peroxide on Mars:
The Viking Results Reinterpreted,
Exploration of hydrothermal targets on Mars,
Scenarios for the evolution of life on Mars,
The Effect of Critical pH on Virus Fate and
Transport in Saturated Porous Medium,
Io: Is Life Possible Between Fire and Ice?, and
Field Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Surfactant Modified Zeolite
and
Iron-Oxide-Coated Sand for Removing Viruses and Bacteria from Ground
Water.
Watch
Why Take a One-Way Trip to Mars? and
NASA planning one-way mission to Mars.
Read
More News of Life on Mars and Saturn’s Titan.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.
Visit his
Facebook page.