UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – Marilyn Fogel, who graduated in 1973 with a degree in biology, may have come to Penn State for the football games, but she left with an appreciation for the interdisciplinary research that would define her career.
Now, she and her husband, Christopher Swarth, aim to get more Penn State students engaged in interdisciplinary research through the establishment of the Marilyn L. Fogel Student Research Fund in Biogeosciences. Biogeosciences combines the fields of geoscience and biological science to answer questions about the modern world and living ecosystems as well as the beginnings of life on Earth. The couple’s $25,000 gift will support research activities for undergraduate and graduate students affiliated with the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute (EESI) in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences (EMS) and will have a particular emphasis on enabling field or laboratory research focused on geology, ecology, meteorology, biogeochemistry, climate science and geography.
“Chris and I are thrilled to have the opportunity to create an endowed fund that promotes biogeosciences in the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute,” said Fogel. “We know the importance of providing opportunities for students to experience thinking outside of a traditional scientific field and open their minds to a new way of critical thinking.”
Fogel enrolled at Penn State as a biology major, but she found her calling as a biogeochemist after taking several classes in EMS that sparked an interest in the study of the origins of life, including courses in paleobotany, coal petrology and physical geology.
Two courses in particular had a profound impact on her career trajectory. Fogel took part in Penn State’s Wallops Island Marine Science program, a course on a Virginia barrier island, in its inaugural year in 1972. The program, with its emphasis on fieldwork on the island’s marshes, beaches and coastal waters, confirmed for Fogel that she wanted to do research with a fieldwork component.
She also enrolled in an organic geochemistry class taught by the late Peter H. Given, professor emeritus and first chair of the former Fuel Science Program in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. There she learned to apply her knowledge of chemistry to understand the biological, environmental and ecological processes that shaped life on Earth.
“I was fascinated with the instruments, the methods and the papers that I encountered in that class,” said Fogel, who would apply this knowledge throughout her career studying tiny particles called stable isotopes to understand the processes that shaped modern and ancient ecosystems. “When I started in geochemistry, I wasn’t at all interested in using stable isotopes for my research, but that certainly changed when I went to graduate school.”