Craig A Johnson, Ph.D.
Craig Johnson is a Research Geologist with the Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science Center.
Craig attended Dartmouth (AB), Michigan (MS), and Yale (PhD). He held a NASA postdoc and a staff position at the American Museum of Natural History in New York prior to joining the USGS in 1992. Craig is responsible for a stable isotope laboratory in which isotopes of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur are measured in rocks, waters, gases, and biological materials. Craig studies ore genesis, environmental impacts of mining, the source and fate of solutes in natural waters and crustal fluids, the isotopic record of marine sulfate, and isotopic records of paleoenvironments.
Science and Products
Hydrothermal zebra dolomite in the Great Basin, Nevada--attributes and relation to Paleozoic stratigraphy, tectonics, and ore deposits
Sulfur- and oxygen-isotopes in sediment-hosted stratiform barite deposits
The δ15N and δ18O values of N2O produced during the co-oxidation of ammonia by methanotrophic bacteria
Isotope and Chemical Methods in Support of the U.S. Geological Survey Science Strategy, 2003-2008
Preliminary analytical results for a mud sample collected from the LUSI Mud Volcano, Sidoarjo, East Java, Indonesia
Spatial and temporal zoning of hydrothermal alteration and mineralization in the Sossego iron oxide-copper-gold deposit, Carajás Mineral Province, Brazil: Paragenesis and stable isotope constraints
Cyanide speciation at four gold leach operations undergoing remediation
Geology and origin of epigenetic lode gold deposits, Tintina Gold Province, Alaska and Yukon
Regional Fluid Flow and Basin Modeling in Northern Alaska
Toxicity of cobalt-complexed cyanide to Oncorhynchus mykiss, Daphnia magna, and Ceriodaphnia dubia: Potentiation by ultraviolet radiation and attenuation by dissolved organic carbon and adaptive UV tolerance
delta 15N and non-carbonate delta 13C values for two petroleum source rock reference materials and a marine sediment reference material
Geochemical constraints on the genesis of the Scheelite dome intrusion-related gold deposit, Tombstone gold belt, Yukon, Canada
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.
Science and Products
Hydrothermal zebra dolomite in the Great Basin, Nevada--attributes and relation to Paleozoic stratigraphy, tectonics, and ore deposits
Sulfur- and oxygen-isotopes in sediment-hosted stratiform barite deposits
The δ15N and δ18O values of N2O produced during the co-oxidation of ammonia by methanotrophic bacteria
Isotope and Chemical Methods in Support of the U.S. Geological Survey Science Strategy, 2003-2008
Preliminary analytical results for a mud sample collected from the LUSI Mud Volcano, Sidoarjo, East Java, Indonesia
Spatial and temporal zoning of hydrothermal alteration and mineralization in the Sossego iron oxide-copper-gold deposit, Carajás Mineral Province, Brazil: Paragenesis and stable isotope constraints
Cyanide speciation at four gold leach operations undergoing remediation
Geology and origin of epigenetic lode gold deposits, Tintina Gold Province, Alaska and Yukon
Regional Fluid Flow and Basin Modeling in Northern Alaska
Toxicity of cobalt-complexed cyanide to Oncorhynchus mykiss, Daphnia magna, and Ceriodaphnia dubia: Potentiation by ultraviolet radiation and attenuation by dissolved organic carbon and adaptive UV tolerance
delta 15N and non-carbonate delta 13C values for two petroleum source rock reference materials and a marine sediment reference material
Geochemical constraints on the genesis of the Scheelite dome intrusion-related gold deposit, Tombstone gold belt, Yukon, Canada
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.