Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

06/02/2026 | Press release | Archived content

Marine Science Students Turn Class Papers Into Published Research

Rutgers undergraduates expand coursework into studies featured in peer-reviewed journals with mentorship from a leading oceanographer

Three Rutgers undergraduates achieved first-author status in peer-reviewed journals, transforming their marine science class projects into published research before graduation.

The work grew out of a course taught by Richard Lutz, a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences within the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences and a renowned oceanographer known for his research on hydrothermal vents. These sunless, deep-sea ecosystems, fueled by geochemical energy, offer insights into Earth's origins and guide the search for extraterrestrial life.

In his "Hydrothermal Vents" course, Lutz assigns each student a scientific paper to expand into a comprehensive review. The exercise requires students to engage deeply with the research and think and write as scientists, synthesizing findings across the field.

"Normally, I spend four to five hours grading each paper, and there's a lot of red ink," said Lutz, who has taught the course for nearly three decades.

Most papers stop at the final grade - but three continued beyond the classroom.

Esha Nauman, a cell biology and neuroscience major with a minor in marine science, examined hydrothermal vents to better understand the biological limits of life and the increasing threats from deep-sea activity, including fracking. Her paper was published in Oceans in January 2026.

Nauman, who graduated in 2025 and is from Basking Ridge, New Jersey is now working as a medical scribe at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital while awaiting decisions on her medical school applications.

The publication process, Nauman said, changed how she approaches feedback and revision.

"Reviewers go line by line, and you have to justify everything," she said. "Dr. Lutz guided me throughout the process and gave me direction, especially when I wasn't sure where to go."

Learning to accept criticism was part of that process.

"It taught me to be open-minded, especially when it comes to constructive criticism," she said. "As a doctor, you're going to get feedback from residents, attendings, even patients. It's important to be receptive and not take it personally. It made me a stronger writer."

Shea Cinquemani's project pushed her into unfamiliar territory. Her paper, published in the Journal of Marine Science and Engineering March 2026, examined how asteroid impacts on early Earth may have created "hydrothermal cradles" capable of supporting the emergence of life.

The work drew on data from sites such as the Chicxulub crater, showing how impact-generated heat sustained freshwater vent systems that provided the chemicals and energy for early life.

"My assignment was to investigate whether hydrothermal vents on Mars could have sparked life," she said. "At first, I knew nothing about the topic and wasn't certain how to even begin."

She expanded the class assignment into a paper that went through months of peer review, extending beyond her graduation in May 2025, with the final version published the following year. The research was later published in the science section of Popular Mechanics.

Cinquemani, a native of Frenchtown, New Jersey, is working in aquaculture and continuing to build on her interests in marine science.

Emory Barrett, who will earn his bachelor's degree in May from the School of Biological and Environmental Sciences in biological oceanography, explored the potential for life in extreme environments beyond Earth. His paper, published in October in Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Science, focused on the possibility of chemoautotrophy on Jupiter's icy moon, Europa, examining how microbes might generate energy by oxidizing inorganic compounds in the absence of sunlight.

All three papers listed the students as lead authors, with Lutz as the corresponding author.

For Barrett, the experience offered a foundation for what comes next. Barrett, of Milford, New Jersey, is preparing to begin a doctoral degree program in oceanography at Rutgers, where he will conduct pilot studies this summer at the Haskin Shellfish Research Laboratory, a Rutgers field station in South Jersey. The laboratory focuses on the sustainable management and cultivation of shellfish, supporting coastal ecosystems and aquaculture development across the region.

Publishing as an undergraduate can shape the next phase of a career.

"It showed I could do this kind of work before even starting a Ph.D.," Barrett said. "It's an added layer of confidence, knowing I've already been through the process before."

The publication process required persistence. In Cinquemani's case, the work underwent extensive scrutiny before acceptance.

"It took about a year to get the paper into publishable shape," Lutz said. "One of the reviewers was a leading expert in the field, and there were roughly 15 pages of comments across five rounds of review."

Lutz, who has conducted more than 85 deep-sea dives and authored nearly 200 papers, said the experience reflects both the rigor of the course and the level of work the students were able to achieve.

At this stage in his career, Lutz said his focus is on mentoring the next generation of scientists.

"I've received many awards over the years, but none of that compares to seeing students succeed like this," he said. "Toward the end of the course, one of the students gave me a leather-bound journal with a note that brought me to tears. On the cover, it said, 'Great leaders inspire greatness in others.' That means more to me than anything else."

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