Dr Robert Sparkes

My profile

Biography

Robert Sparkes is a Senior Lecturer in Environmental Science, with research and teaching interests spanning Environmental Science, Geography, Geology, Chemistry, and Material Science, with expertise in a broad range of chemistry techinques, including chromatography, spectroscopy, and elemental/isopic analysis..

He researches many aspects of the global carbon system, from the continent scale to the molecular scale, and from the deep sea to meteorites. At the moment, he is particularly focussed on the burial and long-term storage of carbon in saltmarshes, and the role that coastal wetlands can play in mitigating climate change. This work, in collaboration with collegues at MMU, academics around the world, government agencies, businesses and charities, has been published in a wide range of academic journals and technical reports.

Robert enjoys teaching Manchester Met students the practical and academic skills required to become future leaders in the Natural Sciences.

Interests and expertise

Robert is an environmental geochemist, tracing carbon as it moves around our planet. He is particularly interested in working out how burying carbon in coastal sediments can help mitigate climate change. 

Research focus:

  • Burial of carbon in newly-created saltmarshes through the process of Managed Realignment, and the potential for climate mitigation
  • Export of organic carbon from Siberian permafrost, via major rivers and coastal erosion, into the Arctic Ocean
  • Erosion of particulate organic carbon from mountain belts, its transport through river, delta and submarine canyon systems, and its burial in deep-sea sediments
  • Identifying and charactersing carbon particles in a range of locations, from deep sea sediments to chondrite meteorites
  • Identifying biomarker molecules in soils, rivers, lakes and oceans, and using these to investigate ecosystems and environmental change

Analytical techniques:

  • Liquid Chromatography - Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS)
  • Raman Spectroscopy
  • Elemental Analysis
  • Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry (IRMS)
  • Gas Chromatography - Mass Spectrometry

Projects

Robert is a co-lead of the Coastal Ecosystem Research Group at MMU.

His current research projects include:

Enhancing Climate Resilience on the Somerset Coast

A £1.5M collaboration with the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, investigating carbon burial and gas release on the Steart Marshes nature reserve. This site was created in 2014 by flooding low-lying farmland and allowing carbon-rich sediment to wash in. These days there is a vibrant bird reserve on the site, whilst the newly forming saltmarsh buries large quantities of organic carbon

Developing a UK Carbon Saltmarsh Code

A collaboration with Jacobs engineering consultancy, working for the Environment Agency to measure carbon burial in saltmarshes across each region of the UK. The results showed rapid burial of organic matter in newly created saltmarsh environments, providing strong evidence for their potential as climate change mitigation  sites.

Teaching

Robert teaches students from the Environmental Science, Geography and Chemistry undergraduate degree programmes. His teaching focuses on building academic knowledge and understanding via hands-on laboratory experience in the various teaching spaces at MMU, as well as encouraging questioning and problem solving in lectures, seminars and workshops.

He supervises student research projects across a wide range of fields, including Arctic climate history, soil and water pollution studies, bird health and carbon burial.

First year courses:

  • Investigating the Environment

Second year courses:

  • Environmental Pollution
  • Earth System Science
  • Analytical Chemistry Labs

Third year courses

  • Coastal and Marine Pollution

Courses

Supervision

PhD completions (3): Emmelianna Kumar (2021) Saule Akhmetkaliyeva (2022), Kate Irvin (2024)

Current post-doctoral researchers (2): Stuart Rae, Lucy McMahon

Research outputs

Robert has published on a wide range of subjects, focussed on analysing and characterising organic carbon in many forms and locations. These works center on understanding the carbon cycle, especially transport of carbon from land to ocean and long-term storage of carbon in marine sediments. His research activity has allowed me to develop expertise in Raman spectroscopy and mass spectrometry which has led to papers on topics ranging from PVC manufacture to meteorites.

Sample vials in an autosampler, waiting for analysis

Career history

2017-

Senior Lecturer, MMU

2016-2017

Lecturer, MMU

2015

Post-Doctoral Researcher, University of Manchester

EPSRC funded research with Prof. Alice Larkin

2012-2015

Post-Doctoral Researcher, University of Manchester

NERC funded research with Prof. Bart van Dongen

2008-2012

PhD, Earth Sciences + Materials Science, University of Cambridge

Title: Marine Sequestration of Particulate Organic Carbon from Mountain Belts

Supervisors: Niels Hovius, Vasant Kumar, Albert Galy

2004-2008

BA + MSci, Natural Sciences, University of Cambridge, 1st Class

Dissertation topic: Earthquake patterns in South America