Eve-Lyn Hinckley

Staff Biologist, Biogeochemist (FSU)

Eve-Lyn Hinckley is an ecosystem biogeochemist whose research interests are in understanding how climate change and land cover/land use change affect the interactions of biogeochemical and hydrological processes at local, regional, and global scales. She received her B.A. from Middlebury College (2001) and Ph.D. from Stanford University (2009). Prior to joining NEON, Eve-Lyn was an NSF Earth Sciences Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research in Boulder, CO.

Publications

Hinckley, E.S. and P.A. Matson. 2011. Transformations, transport, and potential unintended consequences of high sulfur inputs to Napa Valley vineyards. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences doi: 10.1073/pnas.1110741108.

Anderson, S.P., R.S. Anderson, E.S. Hinckley, P. Kelly, and A. Blum. 2011. Exploring weathering and regolith transport controls on Critical Zone development with models and natural experiments. Applied Geochemistry 26: S3-S5.

Hinckley, E.S., S. Fendorf, and P.A. Matson. 2010. Short-term fates of high sulfur inputs in Northern California vineyard soils. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems doi: 10.1007/s10705-010-9383-3.

Hinckley, E.S., C. Kendall, and K. Loague. 2008. Not all water becomes wine: Sulfur inputs as an opportune tracer of hydrochemical losses from vineyards. Water Resources Research doi: 10.1029/2007WR006672.

Contact Information

NEON, Inc.
1685 38th St., Ste, 100
Boulder, CO 80301