
Dr Stuart Kearns
B.Sc.(Dund.), Ph.D.(C.N.A.A.)
Current positions
Senior Lecturer
School of Earth Sciences
Contact
Press and media
Many of our academics speak to the media as experts in their field of research. If you are a journalist, please contact the University’s Media and PR Team:
Research interests
My principal research interest is the investigation of signals resulting from the electron beam interaction with geological materials. Specifically this is applied to a diverse range of problems such as the mineralogy of exceptionally preserved fossils, from the Cambrian Burgess Shale to the Cretaceous Jehol Biota of China, and the mineralogy and petrogenesis of carbonatite ash deposits.
I experiment with novel techniques in electron microscopy as applied to a range of materials: Variable Pressure SEM offers the possibility of non-destructive analysis of rare and precious fossil material; cryogenic electronprobe microanalysis is applied to the quantitative analysis of volcanic glass and other unstable materials. I also research new advances in EPMA which permit analyses of nanoscale volumes under low accelerating voltages.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
THE SKINS AND FEATHERS OF BIRDS AND DINOSAURS
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
01/07/2007 to 01/06/2009
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Recent publications
12/06/2023Extended embryo retention and viviparity in the first amniotes
Nature Ecology and Evolution
Electron Probe Microanalysis in Mineralogy
Encyclopedia of Geology (second edition)
Low-Voltage Electron-Probe Microanalysis of Uranium
Microscopy and Microanalysis
Reply to
Nature Ecology and Evolution
Spatial resolution limits of EPMA
IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering