From 2000 to 2007, Moore served as the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT). Since 2007 he has been Dean of Graduate Studies at RIT.[3]
In 2020, he joined the Comet Research Group and collaborated with them on research that reported high concentrations of iridium, platinum, nickel, and cobalt at the Younger Dryas boundary in material from Abu Hureyra. They concluded that the evidence supports the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis,[4][5] which has been comprehensively refuted by experts in archaeology, astronomy, and impact science.[6]
^Moore, A. M. T. (1978). The neolithic of the Levant (DPhil). Oxford University Research Archive (Thesis). University of Oxford. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
^Fernandez S (2020-03-06). "Fire from the Sky" (Press release). University of California, Santa Barbara. Archived from the original on 2021-07-06. Retrieved 2021-08-07. Based on materials collected before the site was flooded, Kennett and his colleagues contend Abu Hureyra is the first site to document the direct effects of a fragmented comet on a human settlement.