Tanja Bosak

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tanja Bosak is a Croatian-American experimental geobiologist who is currently an associate professor in the Earth, Atmosphere, and Planetary Science department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[1] Her awards include the Subaru Outstanding Woman in Science Award from the Geological Society of America (2007),[2] the James B. Macelwane Medal from the American Geophysical Union[3] (2011), and was elected an AGU fellow (2011).[4] Bosak is recognized for her work understanding stromatolite genesis, in addition to her work in broader geobiology and geochemistry.

Tanja Bosak completed her B.Sc. in geophysics from the University of Zagreb, and her PhD in geobiology at the California Institute of Technology, where she worked with Dianne Newman.[2] Before her PhD, she completed a summer of research at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.[5] She initially started her PhD with the intent of being focusing on planetary sciences. During this time, she published with Andrew Ingersoll on Jupiter's atmosphere.[6] She later focused on stromatolite genesis with Dianne Newman,[4] and in 2005 completed her PhD dissertation, entitled "Laboratory models of microbial biosignatures in carbonate rocks".[7] She undertook postdoctoral work as a Microbial Sciences Initiative Fellow, Harvard University, working with Ann Pearson and Richard Losick.[3]

Work

Awards and honors

Citations

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI