Skip to main content
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
Kent State University logo
  • Apply
  • Visit
  • Give Now
  • FlashLine Login
  • Calendars
  • Phone Directory
  • Maps & Directions
  • Search
Environmental Science and Design Research Institute
Menu Search
  • People
    Close
    • People Overview
    • Leadership
    • Faculty by College / Department
    • Faculty by Research Area
  • Fellows Program
    Close
    • Fellows Program Overview
    • Current fellows
    • Alumni
  • Symposia
    Close
    • Symposia Overview
    • 2024 Sustainability Forum
    • Past Symposia (2013-2023)
  • Featured Students
  • Seed Grants
  • News
  • Resources
  • FlashLine Login
  • Calendars
  • Phone Directory
  • Maps & Directions
  • Search
  • Apply
  • Visit
  • Give Now
Live Chat
Allyson Tessin photo

Allyson Tessin

Earth Sciences
Assistant Professor
Contact Information
Email:
atessin@kent.edu
Phone:
330-672-3473
Personal Website: Sediment Biogeochemistry Lab

Biography

My research bridges the fields of oceanography, biogeochemistry, and sedimentary geology, with the goal of understanding the relationship between the marine carbon cycle and climate change. More specifically, I investigate how changes in ocean deoxygenation, land to sea delivery of carbon and nutrients, and benthic-pelagic biogeochemical coupling control changes in the production and preservation of organic carbon. My interdisciplinary approach combines seagoing science, geological fieldwork, and multi-proxy geochemical analyses to advance my overall goal of understanding and predicting the impact of anthropogenic climate change on marine biogeochemical cycles by combining modern process-focused studies with reconstructions of past marine biogeochemical cycling from the sedimentary record.

Education

Ph.D. University of Michigan
M.S. University of Michigan
B. Phil. University of Pittsburgh
B.A. University of Pittsburgh

Publications

  • Hayes, C., Costa, K.M., Anderson, R.F.,....Tessin, A., et al. 2021.Global Ocean Sediment Composition and Burial Flux in the Deep Sea, Global Biogeochemical Cycles.
  • Freitas, F.S., Arndt, S., Hendry, K.R., Faust, J.C., Tessin, A.C., Marz, C. 2022. Organic Matter Transformation Drives pH and Carbonate Chemistry in Arctic Marine Sediments, Global Biogeochemical Cycles
  • Ward, J., Hendry, K., Arndt, S., Faust, J.,... Tessin, A. et al. 2022. Stable Silicon Isotopes Uncover a Mineralogical Control on the Benthic Silicon Cycle in the Arctic Barents Sea, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
  • Ward, J., Hendry, K., Arndt, S., Faust, J., Freitas, F., Henley, S., Krause, J., Marz, C., Ng, H., Pickering, R., Tessin, A. et al. 2022. Benthic Silicon Cycling in the Arctic Barents Sea: a Reaction-Transport Model Study, Biogeosciences
  • Marz, C., Freitas, F.S., Godbold, J.A., Henley, S.F., Tessin, A.C., et al. 2022 Biogeochemical consequences of a changing Arctic shelf seafloor ecosystem, Ambio
  • Faust, J.C., Tessin, A., Fisher, B.J. et al. Millennial scale persistence of organic carbon bound to iron in Arctic marine sediments. Nat Commun 12, 275 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-20550-0
  • Tessin, A., A. Chappaz, I. Hendy, and N. Sheldon, 2019, Molybdenum speciation as a paleoredox proxy: a case study from Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway black shales, Geology
  • Tessin, A., C. Schroder-Adams, N. Sheldon, I. Hendy, and K. Elderbak, 2019, Local versus seaway-wide trends in deoxygenation in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway. In press at GSA Bulletin
  • Tessin, A., T. Bianchi, I. Hendy, N. Sheldon, J. Hutchings, and E. Arnold, 2017, Organic matter source and thermal maturity within the Late Cretaceous Niobrara Formation, US Western Interior, Marine and Petroleum Geology, 86
  • Horner, S.H., Little, T.M., ...Tessin, A., et al. 2021. Bioactive trace metals and their isotopes as paleoproductivity proxies: An assessment using GEOTRACES-era data, Global Biogeochemical Cycles

Documents

PDF icon Tessin CV June 2024.pdf

News Stories

Millennial scale persistence of organic carbon bound to iron in Arctic marine sediments,
Environmental Science and Design Research Institute

Street Address

800 East Summit Street Kent, OH. 44242


Mailing Address

800 E. Summit St.
Kent, OH 44242

Contact Us

330-672-0709 esdri@kent.edu
Contact Us
  • 330-672-3000
  • info@kent.edu

  • facebook
  • instagram
  • youtube
  • linkedin
  • TikTok
  • X
  • snapchat
  • ...
Information
  • Accessibility
  • Annual Security Reports
  • For Our Alumni
  • For the Media
  • Health Services
  • Jobs & Employment
  • Privacy Statement
  • HEERF CARES/CRRSAA/ARP Act Reporting and Disclosure
  • Website Feedback
Kent State University logo
© 2025 Kent State University All rights reserved.