Tyler Volk

Tyler Volk
Born
United States
EducationUniversity of Michigan (BA) New York University (MA, PhD)
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Martin Hoffert
Website

Tyler Volk is a Professor Emeritus of Environmental Studies and Biology at New York University (NYU). His areas of interest include environmental challenges to global prosperity, global changes in CO2, biosphere theory, and the role of life in Earth's dynamics.[1] He first attended the University of Michigan, graduating with a Bachelors in Architecture in 1971; he later graduated from NYU with a Masters in Applied Sciences in 1982 and a PhD in Applied Sciences in 1984.[2]

Environmental studies and teaching

Volk worked on the planning and development of the Environmental Studies Program with Dale Jamieson and Christopher Schlottmann, launching it in 2007; the program became a department in NYU’s Faculty of Arts and Science in 2014.[1] Volk was awarded NYU’s “Golden Dozen” teaching award in both 2004 and 2008.[3] Volk also received a Distinguished Teaching Award in 2009.[4]

Biosphere science

Volk's research explores Earth's biosphere, modeling the global carbon cycle, and quantifying the biological and physical impacts from the ocean and biosphere on it.[5]

In 2000, Volk served on the American Geophysical Union's Chapman Conference on the Gaia Hypothesis program committee in Valencia, Spain. His presentation, “Gaia is life in a wasteworld of by-products”, was published in 2004.[6] He has debated James Lovelock, Tim Lenton and David Wilkinson on various concepts relating to the Gaia Hypothesis.[7] Volk also publicly debated Axel Kleidon on the role of entropy in the biosphere.[8]

NASA advanced life support

Volk developed math models for element cycling in "closed ecological life support systems" (CELSS) at NASA [9] and remained active in the subfield of advanced life support from 1986 to 1998. He and colleague John Rummel developed early computer models that demonstrated the chemical transformations of crop production, human metabolism, and waste processing.[10] Volk later studied crop growth and development for enhanced productivity, collaborating with crop physiologists Bruce Bugbee of Utah State University, Raymond Wheeler of the NASA Kennedy Space Center,[11] and Ph.D. students Francesco Tubiello and James Cavazonni at NYU.[12]

Books

Tyler Volk has authored seven books, including CO2 Rising: The World’s Greatest Environmental Challenge,[13] What is Death?: A Scientist Looks at the Cycle of Life,[14] Gaia's Body: Toward a Physiology of Earth,[15] and Metapatterns: Across Space, Time, and Mind.[16]

In 2017, he published Quarks to Culture: How We Came to Be,[17] which explores what Tyler Volk calls the "grand sequence", which outlines a series of evolutionary levels from elementary quanta to globalized human civilization. The book was reviewed in Science in January 2018.[18]

Book reviews

References

  1. ^ a b "NYU Department of Environmental Studies".
  2. ^ "Tyler Volk". NYU Arts & Sciences: Faculty.
  3. ^ "Past Recipients". cas.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2026-04-30.
  4. ^ "2008-2009 Distinguished Teaching Award Recipients". www.nyu.edu. Retrieved 2026-04-30.
  5. ^ Volk, Tyler; Hoffert, Martin (1985), "Ocean carbon pumps: analysis of relative strengths and efficiencies in ocean-driven atmospheric CO2 changes", in E. T. Sundquist and W. S. Broecker (ed.), The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric CO2: Natural Variations Archean to Present, vol. Geophysical Monograph 32, American Geophysical Union, Wash., D.C., pp. 99–110
  6. ^ Volk, T. (2004). “Gaia is life in a wasteworld of by-products,“ in Scientists Debate Gaia, S. H. Schneider, et al. (eds.), Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 27—36.
  7. ^ Volk, Tyler (2003). "Seeing deeper into Gaia theory: A reply to Lovelock's response". Climatic Change. 57: 5–7. doi:10.1023/a:1022193813703.
  8. ^ Volk, Tyler (2007). "The properties of organisms are not tunable parameters selected because they create maximum entropy production on the biosphere scale: A by-product framework in response to Kleidon". Climatic Change. 85 (3–4): 251–258. doi:10.1007/s10584-007-9319-3.
  9. ^ Macelroy, Robert D.; Thompson, Brad G.; Tibbitts, Theodore W.; Volk, Tyler (1989-12-01). "Controlled Ecological Life Support Systems: Natural and Artificial Ecosystems". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Volk, Tyler; Rummel, John D. (1987). "Mass balances for a biological life support system simulation model". Advances in Space Research. 7 (4): (4)141-(4)148. doi:10.1016/0273-1177(87)90045-7. hdl:2060/19880002890. PMID 11537263.
  11. ^ Volk, Tyler; Bugbee, Bruce; Wheeler, Raymond M. (1995). "An approach to crop modeling with the energy cascade". Life Support & Biosphere Science. 1: 119–127.
  12. ^ Tubiello, Francesco N.; Volk, Tyler; Bugbee, Bruce (1997). "Diffuse light and wheat radiation-use efficiency in a controlled environment". Life Support & Biosphere Science. 4: 77–85.
  13. ^ Volk, Tyler (2008). CO2 Rising: The World's Greatest Environmental Challenge. USA: The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-22083-5.
  14. ^ Volk, Tyler (2002). What is Death?: A Scientist Looks at the Cycle of Life. USA: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-37544-6.
  15. ^ Volk, Tyler (1998). Gaia's Body: Toward a Physiology of the Earth. USA: Copernicus Books/Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-262-72042-6.
  16. ^ Volk, Tyler (1996). Metapatterns: Across Space, Time, and Mind. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231067515.
  17. ^ Volk, Tyler (May 2017). Quarks to Culture: How We Came to Be. USA: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231179607.
  18. ^ Wood, Barry (19 Jan 2018). "Quarks, culture, combogenesis". Science. 359 (6373): 281. doi:10.1126/science.aar8252.