Beyond Plate Tectonics PDF
Beyond Plate Tectonics PDF
Beyond Plate Tectonics PDF
April 2003
Website and downloadable pdf file available at:
http://www.pangea.stanford.edu/~dpollard/NSF/
Executive Summary
Recognition of exciting opportunities for research in structural geology and tectonics
(SG&T), brought into focus by recent technological developments, new quantitative data
sets, and both conceptual and theoretical advances, motivated a workshop to consider the
future directions (New Departures) for science in this field over the next ten years. Four
topical areas of research were identified at the workshop:
1) Beyond Plate Tectonics: Rheology and Orogenesis of the Continents;
2) The Missing Link: From Earthquakes to Orogenesis;
3) Dynamic Interactions between Tectonics, Climate, and Earth Surface Processes;
4) Co-evolution of Earth and Life.
Descriptions of these research themes along with sections on research facilities and
education form the major sections of this white paper. A major theme of this document is
the integrated nature of research and teaching in SG&T.
Research funded by the NSF in this area has contributed to our fundamental
understanding of how the lithosphere works, helped to build the scientific workforce of
the nation, fostered international collaborations, and spun off knowledge that has had a
direct economic benefit to the nation. Researchers in structural geology and tectonics
have integrated field-based analyses, laboratory work on rock deformation, fluid-rock
interactions, metamorphic reactions, continuum and fracture mechanics, geochemistry,
geochronology, isotope geochemistry, and a variety of other disciplines, across vast
ranges of time and space to develop new ways to examine and understand our planet.
However, total funding and the number of awards in SG&T has remained essentially
level for the last 17 years while collaborative proposals have increased significantly. The
new research opportunities and strong basis for collaborative research on interdisciplinary
problems argue for increased levels of support for the SG&T community.
Plate tectonics emerged as a unifying theory of the solid Earth from observations of
the ocean floors where deformation, seismicity, and volcanism are localized at
boundaries between rigid plates. On the other hand, more pervasive deformation and
wide continental mountain belts indicate weak rheological behavior typifies continental
orogenesis. Thus we must move beyond plate tectonics and seek significant
improvement to our understanding of continental tectonics through a detailed and
comprehensive study of the rheology of continental crust and mantle rocks. Deformation
of the Earth's crust is unevenly distributed in space and time: a single earthquake may
produce substantial deformation and damage in just tens of seconds while tectonic events
such as mountain building occur over millions to tens of millions of years. Deformation
appears very different from these two perspectives, and the temporal and conceptual
missing link between them is one of the most fertile areas for future research.
Topography represents the net product of tectonic and surficial processes, and unraveling
the intricacies of this coupled system represents a primary challenge in this field, with the
opportunity to gain new insights concerning tectonic processes operating within the
Earth. Tectonicists are poised to help usher in new paradigms for understanding the
motions and deformation of continents in deep time. This will require forging a new
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Table of Contents
New Departures in Structural Geology and Tectonics ....................................................... 2
Executive Summary..................................................................................................... 3
Table of Contents......................................................................................................... 5
Participants .................................................................................................................. 7
Preface ......................................................................................................................... 8
Priorities in Solid Earth Sciences: A Related Workshop ..................................... 9
Research in Structural Geology and Tectonics at NSF ...................................... 10
Beyond Plate Tectonics: Rheology and Orogenesis of the Continents ..................... 13
Introduction ........................................................................................................ 13
Research Questions and Opportunities............................................................... 16
Studies of Transitional Brittle-Ductile Deformation and Strain Localization.... 19
Coupled Mechanical-Hydrologic Systems ......................................................... 20
Integrated Studies of Material-Specific, Mechanism-based Rheologies............ 20
Formulation and Evaluation of Rate and State Constitutive Relations that
Describe Transient and Steady-State Behavior .................................................. 20
Fabric Development and Anisotropy at Large Shear Strains ............................. 21
Chemical Weakening and Hardening................................................................. 21
The Missing Link: From Earthquakes to Orogenesis ................................................ 22
Introduction ........................................................................................................ 22
Research Questions ............................................................................................ 24
Relating Elastic and Permanent Deformation .................................................... 24
Spatial and Temporal Distributions of Earthquakes........................................... 26
Localization of Deformation .............................................................................. 26
The Role of Fluids .............................................................................................. 27
Fault Zone Processes and Materials ................................................................... 27
Research Opportunities ...................................................................................... 28
Dynamic Interactions Between Tectonics, Climate and Earth Surface Processes .... 32
Introduction ........................................................................................................ 32
Research Questions and Opportunities............................................................... 33
Coupled Surface Process and Tectonic Models ................................................. 34
Study of the Mechanics of Erosion .................................................................... 35
Participants
David D. Pollard (Chair), Stanford University
Rick Allmendinger, Cornell University
Mark T. Brandon, Yale University
Roland Bergmann, University of California, Berkeley
Rebecca J. Dorsey, University of Oregon
David A. Evans, Yale University
James P. Evans, Utah State University
Raymond C. Fletcher, University of Colorado
David M. Fountain, National Science Foundation
George E. Gehrels, The University of Arizona
Laurel B. Goodwin, New Mexico Institute of Mining & Technology
Arthur Goldstein, National Science Foundation
Karl Karlstrom, University of New Mexico
Andreas K. Kronenberg, Texas A&M University
Tracy Rushmer, University of Vermont
Jane Selverstone, University of New Mexico
John H. Shaw, Harvard University
Carol Simpson, Boston University
Bruno Vendeville, The University of Texas
Brian P. Wernicke, California Institute of Technology
Kelin Whipple, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sean Willett, University of Washington
Martha Withjack, Rutgers University
Teng-fong Wong, State University of New York at Stony Brook
An Yin, University of California, Los Angeles
Herman B. Zimmerman, National Science Foundation
Preface
Over the past 30 years research in structural geology and tectonics (SG&T),
supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF), has generated an impressive body
of knowledge about the physical and chemical processes that shape the lithosphere of our
planet. Work funded by the Tectonics Program has increased our fundamental
understanding of how the lithosphere evolves, contributed to building the scientific
workforce of the nation, fostered international collaborations, and spun off knowledge
that has directly benefited the economy of the nation. Well before other fields discovered
the concept of multidisciplinary approaches to science, researchers in structural geology
and tectonics have integrated field-based analyses, laboratory work on rock deformation,
fluid-rock interactions, metamorphic reactions, continuum and fracture mechanics,
geochemistry, geochronology, isotope geochemistry, and a variety of other fields, across
vast ranges of time and space to develop new ways of examining and understanding
Earth's lithosphere.
In light of recent changes at the NSF, including the signing of the act to double the
budget, changes in the managers of the programs that affect the structural geology and
tectonics communities, new initiatives in topics such as biocomplexity, information
technologies, engineering, earth systems science, and the increased emphasis on large
integrative projects such as Earthscope, combined with the need to support single PI
projects, it is timely that the structural geology and tectonics community reflect on their
recent accomplishments and future prospects, and communicate these to the broader
community.
In order for the program managers within NSF to make a case for increased funding,
we must provide them with the evidence of past successes and our visions for the future.
This document is one effort at providing an overview of some of the recent exciting
advances we have made, and an attempt to provide an overview of where some of our
discipline is headed in the next 10 years. This document is not intended to tell NSF what
to fund, nor is it inclusive of every significant advance made by SG&T researchers.
Rather, this white paper is the best effort of a group of researchers from a diverse
spectrum of our community to reflect upon some of the recent highlights and suggest
where this research might lead.
This white paper is the outgrowth of a workshop organized by David Pollard of
Stanford University and held in Denver, in September 2002. During this two-day
workshop, twenty members of the SG&T academic community presented brief overviews
of topics related to their research specialties, and discussed future objectives and needs.
Representing the NSF were David Fountain, Arthur Goldstein, and Herman Zimmerman.
From this meeting draft chapters were written by working groups. Edited versions were
circulated amongst the whole group, and the final document was collated and edited by
David Pollard. In an intellectually diverse community, there will be some who disagree
with some of this document. Our intent was to begin to provide some guidelines for our
science in the near future. A major theme of this document is the integrated nature of our
work, and the implications this has for future funding of the research and teaching we do.
We look forward to fostering a stronger structural geology and tectonics program at the
NSF, and appreciate the opportunity to craft this document.
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10
Figure 1. Annual amount of funds awarded in the Tectonics Program from 1985 to
2002.
Figure 2. Average award in the Tectonics Program. Awards are enumerated on the
basis of awards to institutions. Some awards may fund several PIs at a single
institution.
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Introduction
Plate tectonics emerged as a unifying theory of the solid Earth from observations of
the ocean floors long after geologists had described the orogenic belts of the continents.
Deformation, seismicity, and volcanism in the oceans are localized at boundaries between
rigid oceanic plates overlying viscous asthenosphere. Continental geology, on the other
hand, does not fit the plate tectonic model as well. The pervasive deformation and
internal structure of wide continental mountain belts (Figure 5) indicate non-rigid
behavior. Continents appear to be weak relative to oceanic plates, and quantitatively
significant deformation within continental lithosphere interiors and margins is
documented by GPS, seismic and stratigraphic methods. This weak rheological behavior
typifies continental orogenesis, in all of its manifestations, including regions of
convergence, divergence, and transform faulting. Significant improvement to our
understanding of continental tectonics will require a detailed and comprehensive study of
the rheology of continental crust and mantle rocks.
The response of lithosphere and asthenosphere to tectonic, gravitational and thermal
loads is strongly dependent on rheological behavior. We know that oceanic plates owe
their mechanical character to the friction and flow laws of crust and mantle, and their
dependence on lithostatic load and temperature. Oceanic plate thickness and effective
rigidity are well explained by the properties of oceanic gabbro and an upper mantle
dominated by olivine. Continental lithosphere is much more varied in composition and
physical properties. The maximum depth of seismicity in oceanic plates matches the
thermally defined transition from brittle dilatant processes to ductile viscous processes.
We do not have such a clear correlation in continental lithosphere. Recently, the
importance of trace hydrous components of olivine to oceanic lithosphere rheology has
been recognized; extraction of water in melts generated at divergent rifts leads to a
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marked strengthening of oceanic lithosphere. Does water play a similar role in the
strength of continental lithosphere?
Figure 5. Field example illustrating structures and fabrics associated with pervasive
ductile flow in the lower crust. Photograph shows the north face (2000 meter high)
of Dickson Fjord (72o 52N, 26o 37W), with large folds exposed in Precambrian
gneisses of the Greenland Caledonides (courtesy of Jane Gilotti).
The contrast between oceanic and continental deformation is highlighted by the
remarkable range of models currently being considered for mantle return flow associated
with convergent deformation of continental lithosphere. At one extreme (Figure 6a),
continental mantle lithosphere is relatively strong; thus it is subducted in a plate-like
fashion. The weaker, buoyant crust is left behind to form a thickened orogen. At the other
extreme (Figure 6b), the mantle lithosphere behaves in a more fluid fashion. Return flow
may involve steady down welling in a symmetric or asymmetric fashion (as illustrated by
Figure 6b), or it may involve episodic drip-like return flow. Seismic tomography provides
tentative evidence for the full range of behavior. Modeling indicates that the mode of the
return flow is dependent on convergence rate and the rheologies of the crust and mantle.
Mantle return flow causes the crust to thicken, forming a large orogenic wedge, much as
observed for the Alps, Himalayas, and Rocky Mountains.
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for this area of research. Traditionally, the United States has been the leader in the study
of rheology of the crust and mantle. This situation has shifted dramatically over the last
10 years, with the result that labs in Europe are now dominating the field. Experimental
rock deformation has flourished in Europe due to better funding, and better institutional
support for the facilities that are required for this work.
Figure 7. Strength envelopes with depth for continental crust and mantle illustrating
competing interpretations for the relative strength of the lower crust and underlying
mantle. In all cases, upper crust strengths are represented by Byerlee's frictional
strength and a thermally activated flow law for wet quartz. Lower crust strengths
are predicted by wet and dry rheologies for diabase (MD) and granulite (WC).
Mantle strengths are given by wet and dry olivine rheologies (from Jackson, J.,
2002, Strength of the continental lithosphere: Time to abandon the jelly sandwich?,
GSA Today, 12, 4-9).
small laboratory specimens. Deforming rocks are non-equilibrium systems and the
observed flow relationships, microstructures, and textures depend on competing rates of
deformation and recovery processes. Studies of the physics and chemistry governing
mechanical properties are required if we are to formulate mechanism-based flow laws
and to recognize microstructures that result from the same processes in experimental
specimens and naturally deformed rocks.
Experimental studies are needed to evaluate the rheologies of a wide range of crustal
lithologies, with and without fluids present, and across conditions that favor dilatant
brittle failure and frictional sliding, thermally activated plastic and diffusional flow, and
transitional brittle-ductile deformation. However, experiments alone cannot answer all
questions posed. Physical and chemical processes of rock deformation operate at scales
ranging from failure of crystalline bonds at crack tips and motion of lattice defects, to
grain-scale deformation in multiphase rocks, to displacement on map-scale faults and
shear zones (Figures 5 and 8).
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Field and theoretical studies of small-scale structure and fabric may be used to
examine simultaneous deformation and reaction at conditions where fluid-rock
interaction, mineral growth and dissolution, and melting are important (Figure 9).
Modeling of large-scale active tectonics may be used to examine the sensitivity of
rheology to thermal and lithologic structure, and to examine the consequences of
gravitational loading, uplift, erosion, and magmatic events. In addition to mechanical
constraints and boundary conditions, these models require petrological, geochronological,
and stratigraphic constraints on pressure and temperature histories, and information on
conductive and advective heat flow, and rates of rock exhumation and burial.
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Introduction
Deformation of the Earth's crust is unevenly distributed in space and time and thus
its study has become partitioned into disciplines with tools of markedly different
precision populated by practitioners with markedly different perspectives (Fig. 10). A
single earthquake may produce substantial deformation and significant damage of
relevance to society in just tens of seconds (10-6 years). Seismologists and geodesists
have developed highly accurate methods and tools (seismometers, strong motion
instruments, creep meters, GPS, InSAR, etc.) to measure deformation during and between
major earthquakes (up to 102 years if we also utilize historic leveling and triangulation
data). The majority of the signal captured by GPS, InSAR, and similar instrumentation
may be modeled as linear elastic deformation. However, the time span of decades is too
short to capture more than a few major earthquakes on the important seismogenic faults
in an actively deforming volume of the Earth's crust and may miss much of the associated
inelastic deformation.
Tectonic events such as mountain building, development of major transform
systems, and rifting occur over millions to tens of millions of years. The structures
produced on these longer time scales also directly affect society. For example, faults
provide both conduits and barriers to fluid flow, and thereby influence the distribution
and production of water and hydrocarbons as well as contaminant transport; mountain
belts affect global atmospheric circulation patterns, thereby impacting climate. Field
relations seldom allow age constraints tighter than 1 m.y. (106 yr) to be placed on
individual structures, though growth strata imaged by seismic reflection permit some
additional resolution. Deformation at these time scales is decidedly permanent; the
transient elastic strain measured at 101 yrs and less is an insignificant fraction of the total
finite strain recorded in a mountain belt.
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Figure 10. Earth scientists study deformation across more than 15 orders of
magnitude of temporal sampling windows. Processes, rheologies, types of studies,
and methods used vary enormously across this range. The white band,
corresponding to times from decades to a million years, is the least understood part
of the range and thus the missing link in relating earthquakes to orogenesis.
Deformation appears very different from these two perspectives. The temporal and
conceptual gap between them is one of the most fertile areas for future research: How
does deformation at the time scale of decades and less which includes elastic strain as
well as permanent deformation accomplished by seismic and aseismic fault movement,
integrate over hundreds to millions of years to form a major tectonic province? The time
range from 102 to 106 years is the missing link. Without studies at these time scales, we
are unlikely to understand the spatial and temporal distribution of earthquakes, which is
fundamental for evaluating seismic hazards. The life cycle of faults is initiated and their
mechanical character set over this time range. If we wish to use map- to micro-scale
observations to read the rock record of earthquakes we must understand this missing link.
Finally, to understand fully the rheological character of the upper crust we must bridge
this conceptual gap between elastic and inelastic deformation.
We expect that tangible results from this line of research will include: 1) a much
clearer understanding of rates, durations, and the episodic nature of deformation in the
crust, as well as the mechanisms controlling these factors; 2) physically based and
mechanically plausible models for earthquake sources and the complex process of rupture
propagation, along with an understanding of the driving forces and energy balance of
earthquakes and the earthquake cycle; 3) a better understanding of the role of chemical
and hydrologic processes in rock deformation; 4) characterization of material properties
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of rocks in the seismogenic zone and the architecture of faults in different lithologies and
tectonic settings; and 5) characterization of structures in the upper few kilometers of the
crust and a better understanding of their relationship to such factors as topography and
tectonic geomorphology.
Research Questions
1) How do the elastic strains measured by techniques such as GPS and InSAR bear on
earthquake distribution and how does this elastic signal relate to permanent deformation
at the scale of millions of years?
2) Are the repeat times for earthquakes quasi-periodic or more complex?
3) How and why does deformation localize into faults?
4) What role do fluids play in these phenomena?
5) What is the structural/microstructural record of fault-zone processs and how does this
record reflect the mechanical behavior of fault-zone materials?
alone answer the questions posed. Integration of these studies with mechanical modeling
will permit regions of active tectonics to be utilized as crustal-scale laboratories within
which conceptual models can be tested and refined.
Figure 11. An example from active foreland thrust belt in western Argentina of
studying deformation at several time scales. (A) Location of study area in western
South America, shown with red box. (B) Landsat Thematic Mapper base showing
active thin-skinned Precordillera thrust belt and active thick-skinned Sierras
Pampeanas. Dashed white line marks reversal of structural vergence; the thickskinned structures to the east verge west whereas the thin-skinned structures to the
west verge east. White letters highlighted with red show the approximate locations
of two large historic earthquakes and their magnitudes; another M 7.4 earthquake
occurred just east of San Juan in 1977. Yellow lines and ellipses: velocity vectors
(relative to a fixed South America) and uncertainties from the MATE GPS network
(data courtesy of B. Brooks, R. Smalley, M. Bevis, & E. Kendrick). (C) Shortening
rate history of the Precordillera and western Sierras Pampeanas for the last 20 Ma
from Jordan et al. (1993) and Zapata & Allmendinger (1996). Red curves show rates
based on minimum permissible duration of motion for each thrust plate; blue curves
show rates based on maximum permissible duration. Note the striking similarity of
million year rates to GPS velocities, even though the latter are dominated by an
elastic signal from a locked plate boundary.
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Figure 12. Clast lineations recording slip direction in the Sand Hill fault, Rio
Grande rift, New Mexico. Images show deformed sediments in the hanging wall
mixed zone that were subsequently cemented with calcite (Heynekamp et al., 1999).
A. View looking east at fault core bounding surface. Elongate clasts ('c') are
parrallel to subsequently formed slickenside striaw. Shrubs are roughly 1 m high. B.
Photomicrograph taken in the plane light, ~6 mm wide in longest dimension.
Fragmented sand grains ('c') in zone of deformation bands are demonstrably
aligned parallel to macroscopically visible lineations in 3-d (Goodwin and Tikoff,
2002). This zone of deformation bands os juxtaposed against colluvial wedge
sediments, preserved in the hanging wall, that record paleo ground rupture.
Localization of Deformation
Deformation can be distributed throughout a region of interest or localized within
discrete zones. Many mature, major faults, like the San Andreas, appear to be weaker
than rock mechanics experiments would predict. Processes of nucleation and growth and
the mechanical behavior of faults - which bear on localization and fault reactivation - are
poorly understood. These processes can be best investigated by the integration of
experimental deformation studies, analytical and numerical modeling, and structural and
microstructural analyses of faults and fault-zone materials in the field and laboratory.
Investigation of how fault segments become linked in space and time, for example, will
help us to understand the significance of the geometric complexity of fault systems.
Understanding the spectrum of failure and localization modes recorded by fault-zone
structures (e.g., opening and shear fractures, shear and compactive deformation bands,
foliations and lineations) would further elucidate the faulting process.
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rock microstructure and mineralogy, emphasizing the fact that the mechanical response of
an individual fault can change over time.
Recent developments suggest ways to exploit new and old technologies to better
understand the geologic record of fault-zone processes. Combined geodetic and
seismologic data offer the opportunity to target faults that record different deformation
histories, including different strain rates. New experimental approaches should allow
structures formed in the lab to be compared with those developed in the field and suggest
new research directions. For example, during dynamic rupture and coseismic slip,
dramatic changes in frictional strength may arise from frictional melting and thermal
pressurization. Recent lab measurements argue for the coefficient of friction attaining
values as low as 0.1 at slip velocities ~0.1 m/s, possibly due to the generation of a gellike microstructure. Field observations indicate that seismic slip may be highly localized;
theoretical models would then imply that the microstructure associated with partial
melting, flash heating and thermal transients can be resolved only at a very fine scale.
Research Opportunities
Answering the questions we pose will require investigation in a variety of tectonic
environments. We therefore recommend taking advantage of, but not restricting research
to, the focused initiatives mentioned herein. Activities such as EarthScope leverage, but
do not replace, research into these fundamental questions. The integration of field,
geophysical, laboratory, and theoretical studies when feasible and appropriate will
facilitate the proposed work. We therefore support efforts to remove artificial boundaries
between disciplines, to which deformation processes do not adhere. This recognition that
other disciplines may contribute to research in structural geology and tectonics is
intended to encourage collaborations with geophysicists, hydrologists, geochemists, and
petrologists.
GPS and InSAR (addressing questions 1-3) Continued GPS monitoring and
development of new techniques such as InSAR will assist in understanding the
nature and spatial distribution of surface movements on the time scale of years.
Present GPS arrays in large diffuse plate boundary zones (Tibet, Andes, and
western U.S.) are, however, too sparse - we get an averaged, continuous velocity
field but miss important information on the motion and deformation near
individual faults. Geodesy becomes particularly useful when integrated with
seismic paleoseismic, and structural geologic constraints. For example, we can
consider a large earthquake as the beginning of a lithosphere-scale rock
mechanics experiment. The boundary conditions imposed by the coseismic
rupture on the surrounding crust and upper mantle can be defined. It is possible to
constrain the geometry of the experimental 'apparatus' - fault geometry, crustal
layering or heterogeneity, topography - and gauge the response of the system
using surface displacement data and the results of a mechanical model of elastic
strain associated with fault slip (Fig. 14).
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Figure 14. InSAR and model interferograms from the 1999 Mw 7.1 Hector Mine
earthquake, CA. One fringe cycle = 28.3 mm displacement in the look direction of
the satellite. Model developed by Laurent Maerten using the Poly3Dinv code utilizes
the boundary element method solution for elastic deformation associated with fault
slip.
The elastic models reproduce the pattern of deformation recorded by the InSAR
data, demonstrating a powerful tool for investigating such phenomena as triggered
earthquakes. Geodetic monitoring on scales from major plate boundaries to
individual faults is therefore an important goal. Finally, models can be
constructed to help interpret the processes and their rates, and ultimately to
constrain rheologic parameters of fault zones and lithospheric rocks at different
depths.
Mapping and Field Structural Analysis (addressing questions 1-5). Mapping and
field structural analysis of both outcrops and core from the active faults
mentioned above are critical to this effort. Identification and quantitative
characterization of 3-D patterns of deformation, observations pertaining to strain
localization, and structural analysis of young faults that extends beyond
paleoseismic investigations are particularly important to answering the questions
detailed earlier. This research must include observations made from regional to
hand-sample scales, where fabrics that may record strain localization or strain
rate, or impact fault strength, are visible.
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Introduction
The Earth's surface represents an important and underexploited source of information
regarding tectonic processes operating within the Earth. The ready availability of digital
topographic data and new data obtained by emerging technologies (STRM, ASTER,
Lidar, GPS Total Station, reflectorless laser rangefinders, etc) thus represent new
opportunities to study structures and tectonic processes within the lithosphere. However,
our ability to infer tectonic information from surface observations is hampered by a lack
of quantification of the causal links between tectonic activity and topography.
Topography represents the net product of tectonic and surficial processes and unraveling
the intricacies of this highly coupled system represents a primary challenge in this field.
We recognize that the geosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere interact in
diverse ways at a variety of spatial and temporal scales. The principal interface between
these spheres is the Earth's surface. Tectonic activity creates the surface relief that
amplifies these interactions. Surface processes destroy relief by redistributing mass.
These processes are coupled insofar as there is a deformational response to surface
change and the resultant gravitational forces. Rates of surface processes are modulated by
climatic factors, primarily precipitation rate and distribution which determines discharge
levels in rivers. Interactions between tectonic and surficial processes are complex and
involve coupling with feedback through diverse mechanisms (Fig. 15). For example,
fluvial incision rates increase in response to a tectonically-driven increase in channel
slope, but may also increase or decrease in response to changes in drainage area as water
divides are moved or created by tectonic activity. Climatic response to increased
elevation includes orographically-enhanced precipitation, but it also includes lower
surface temperatures as mountains rise through the atmospheric lapse rate; lower
temperatures result in periglacial erosion processes and eventually the creation and
growth of alpine glaciers (Fig. 15).
The dynamic system of the Earth's near surface has implications for natural hazards
and the environment in which we live. Floods, landslides, debris flows and even
earthquakes are a consequence of the processes creating dynamic landscapes in
tectonically-active areas. Understanding the rates and variability of mass transport
systems on the earth's surface will lead to better hazard forecasting. There are also
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implications for climate change; a better understanding of how the Earth's surface has
responded to climate change over geologic time will lead to a better understanding of
how climate change will affect the Earth's surface environment over human timescales.
Figure 15. Feedback loops within the dynamic system defined by tectonics, climate
and erosional surface processes. There are two feedback loops; a direct path (I)
whereby tectonics increases erosion rates by increasing elevation, relief and
drainage basin areas and an indirect loop (II), whereby increased elevation induces
increased erosion rates through changes in climate. Climate change is in the form of
enhanced precipitation or lower temperatures, which lead to glaciation. In each
case, there is feedback in the tectonic response to surface mass redistribution. More
complex processes and pathways are likely to exist.
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vast range of climate and meso-scale meteorogical models is likely to lead to important
new insights.
Figure 17: Elevation of strath terraces along the Bagmati River (From Lave and
Avouac, 1999). The elevation of the strath levels computed from all DEM and field
measurements are indicated by solid thin lines and dashed lines. Solid thick lines
correspond to Holocene terraces, and dashed lines correspond to hypothetical levels
between late Pleistocene terraces correlated by similar color and depth of
weathering. The structural cross section, with the same horizontal scale is shown for
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comparison. The terraces attest to sustained Holocene and late Pleistocene activity
of the MFT fold. In contrast, they did not record significant offset across the MDT
and suggest little deformation linked to this thrust.
The height of a dated terrace above the modern river channel provides a rate of
incision or, with an assumption of steady channel elevation, provides a rock uplift rate.
For example, Lave and Avouac mapped and dated Holocene and Pleistocene terraces
(Fig. 17) across the Siwaliks along the Himalayan front, noting their relationship with
mapped structures. They were able to infer and quantify motion on the Main Frontal
Thrust of the Himalaya.
Terrace incision rates in space and time will provide important constraints on the
structural style of deformation, geometry of sub-surface structures, and time-averaged
deformation rates at multiple space and time scales. Such information can greatly aid
studies of regional strain partitioning, the interaction and evolution of individual
structures, and can provide a linkage between geologic and geodetic measures of
deformation rates.
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Figure 19: Shaded relief and precipitation (color scale) of the Andes. Topography is
from the global 30 s GTOPO30 digital elevation model. Precipitation is from
Hoffman (1975). Orography and global climate zonation are clearly visible with wet
(blue) and dry (brown) zones reversing east-west polarity from north to south.
Figure from Montgomery et al. (2001)
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Figure 20. LIDAR image of SE Bainbridge island, near Seattle, showing the Toe
Jam Hill scarp of the Seattle fault. Fault was trenched by the USGS in 1998 and
1999.
LIDAR/ALSM is the first practical system for producing high-resolution images of
the earths surface in areas covered by a thick canopy of vegetation. Because the relief
created by the latest movements on active structures is only a small fraction of the
thickness of a forest canopy (of order meters versus tens of meters, respectively), it can
be very difficult to detect by conventional methods. For example, the Seattle fault in the
Puget Sound lowlands, is difficult to detect in the field and completely obscured in aerial
photography. However, LIDAR imagery clearly reveals this structure (Figure 20),
indicating its recent activity and current threat to the Puget Sound population centers. In
addition to this capability, LIDAR/ALSM may also be used to produce high-resolution
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(25 cm) digital topographic data, which are essential for quantitative analysis of active
structures.
Introduction
This section summarizes the need for the Earth Sciences community, and tectonicists
in particular, to study the evolution of Earth in 'deep time.' As presently understood,
geological processes of billion-year antiquity appear at once rather similar to those
observed today (the principle of uniformitarianism) and also divulge some important
secular changes in planetary (and biological) evolution. The study of Earth's multibillion-year geological record allows us to assess these factors with numerous 'natural
laboratories' of ancient processes. About 85% of Earth history passed prior to the
Cambrian appearance of skeletal animals, whose rich fossil record in the succeeding 550
million years has permitted precise timekeeping of natural events. Without such a
complete fossil record, Earth scientists who delve into the Precambrian eras must rely on
diverse datasets for even a basic understanding of stratigraphic correlations, let alone
complex and interwoven Earth-system processes. Reconstruction of Archean (older than
2.5 billion years, still nearly half of Earth history) surface environments, home to the
earliest forms of life on this planet, is especially difficult due to a limited number of well
preserved sedimentary successions of that age.
Processes operating on the longest temporal scales can be related to those associated
with the largest spatial scales, and some of the broadest scales of scientific thought. For
example, one of the grandest tectonic problems on Earth concerns the episodic assembly
and fragmentation of supercontinents. The supercontinent of Pangea, which was
assembled about 300 million years ago, during a time of spectacular diversification of
animal and plant life, is now well accepted and its shape and evolution are increasingly
well understood. However, it is instructive to realize that the acceptance that the Pangean
supercontinent existed was directly linked to the acceptance of the Plate Tectonic
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paradigm. This paradigm, that lithospheric plates move at rates of cm per year and that
tectonic processes are concentrated at plate margins, developed in the late 1960s and
became accepted in the 1970s, and may mark science's most important advance in
understanding our dynamic planet.
As Earth science matures, tectonicists are poised to help usher in new paradigms for
understanding continents in deep time. This will require forging an international
understanding of pre-Pangean supercontinents and the supercontinent cycle and will lead
to newly realized connections between Earth processes and their affects on life that will
be vitally important for humans. Problems of continental evolution bring together and
unify diverse issues such as mantle dynamics, economic geology, paleoclimate, and
surface geochemical cycles; and they also provide important paleogeographic constraints
on significant events in biological evolution. Methods of solving these ancient continental
puzzles involve diverse tools: field observations at the outcrop scale and laboratory
analyses at the microscopic scale. Tectonics, the study of the achitecture, evolution, and
dynamics of the lithosphere, is well suited to address questions of early Earth history, for
it is a discipline that uses every tool available to understand the geological record, over
the broadest ranges of spatial and temporal scales. Tectonicists, trained to assimilate
diverse data sets and integrate diverse analytical methods, will play a key role in
continued efforts to study the co-evolution of our planet and its life.
Rodinia
Since the initial conception of a late Precambrian supercontinent in the early 1970s,
serious consideration of Rodinia's paleogeography began only about ten years ago. The
last decade has witnessed many refinements of Rodinias configuration, and some
refutations of long-held tectonic assumptions. Reconstructing Rodinia, and any other
supercontinent from the pre-Pangean era which lacks the high precision afforded by
seafloor magnetic anomalies, involves two fundamental datasets: comparisons of ancient
tectonostratigraphic links among presently fragmented continental terrains, and
paleomagnetic reconstructions in a fixed external reference frame. The former dataset is
generated by detailed field mapping, stratigraphic reconstruction, structural analysis, and
high-precision geochronology, and will increasingly rely on projects of international
cooperation and integration. The latter dataset also requires excellent field geology
combined with precise geochronology and improving paleomagnetic techniques.
Modern conceptions of Rodinia were born of qualitative tectonostratigraphic
comparisons between western North America (at the margin of the Proterozoic craton
Laurentia) and Australia-East Antarctica, combined with a very sparse paleomagnetic
data set. The SWEAT reconstruction initially found some paleomagnetic support,
although it was recognized that reliable data were few in number. Alternative
reconstructions have since arisen, emphasizing different qualitative aspects of Laurentian
geology as compared with the Trans-Antarctic Mountains, central Australia, South China,
and Siberia. Recent high-quality paleomagnetic results from Western Australia continue
to confound the 'classic' reconstructions of Laurentia with Australia and East Antarctica,
leaving substantial freedom for new models. Our present understanding of Rodinian
paleogeography is the subject of healthy and vigorous debate at nearly every geological
and geophysical meeting (Fig. 21).
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Figure 22. The gently folded sedimentary succession contained within this
photograph, of the Flinders Ranges in South Australia, span two ~45 rotations of
the Australian continent (and any formerly contiguous neighbors) in latest
Precambrian time. Well preserved Neoproterozoic sedimentary-volcanic successions
such as this are found throughout the world, with rapidly increasing precision on
numerical age constraints. Detailed studies of these successions during the next
decade will help answer many of today's enigmas of the Neoproterozoic world.
[Photo: David Evans]
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Low-latitude Glaciations
The essence of the Neoproterozoic climatic paradox is the widespread abundance of
glacial deposits intimately associated with warm-climate indicators such as marine
carbonates. Unusual isotopic signatures, including shifts in 13C as great as 15%,
characterize those carbonate successions, and paleomagnetic results from several glacial
deposits and bounding units indicate near-equatorial depositional latitudes. Much recent
attention and controversy has surrounded the Snowball Earth hypothesis, a suggestion
that the planet's oceans may have iced over completely for as long as 10 Myr, as many as
five times in the Neoproterozoic Era. Appearance of the enigmatic Ediacaran megascopic
fauna and earliest evidence of animal embryos follow soon in the geological record after
the last of these glaciations, and it has been proposed that enduring global ice cover could
have caused evolutionary 'bottlenecks' that cleared the way for biological advent of
multicellularity (Fig. 23). The Snowball Earth hypothesis, and any competing models for
explaining Neoproterozoic low-latitude glaciations, will be tested through detailed field
mapping (including stratigraphy and structural analysis) and multidisciplinary
combinations of laboratory techniques (including isotopic and paleomagnetic studies) and
forward modeling. The problem is inherently broad in scope, and tectonic studies will
play an important part in defining spatial and temporal boundary conditions at the
regional at local, regional, and global scales.
Figure 23. Could 'freeze-fry' extreme and sudden shifts in paleoclimate have paved
the way for the evolution and rapid diversification of animals? The Snowball Earth
hypothesis invokes global sea ice cover for as long as 5-10 million years, occurring as
many as five times in Neoproterozoic history. [From Hoffman and Schrag, 2002,
Terra Nova, v.14, p.129-155.]
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Facilities
finding datable materials, such as volcanic ashes, associated with any given surface.
Cosmogenic dating can be applied to most common rocks types, is accurate for features
ranging in age from a few thousand to a few hundred thousand years, and these methods
open up a broad new frontier of investigation of geologic processes at these time scales.
Given the impact of earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and landslides on society, there is an
urgent need to increase our understanding of the rates and magnitudes of these processes
and their tectonic framework. It is therefore critical that funds are available to develop
this technology as rapidly as possible.
At present, most cosmogenic isotope analyses are conducted with accelerator mass
spectrometer (AMS) facilities at Purdue University, Lawrence Livermore National Labs,
and the University of Arizona. These facilities are able to meet the current demand for
analyses, but future demands for higher sample through-put, better precision, and smaller
sample size will require both improvements in facilties and a larger number of highly
skilled researchers. In particular, sample preparation, which involves routine wet
chemical methods and can be done at a separate facility from the actual AMS analyses, is
currently a major bottleneck in investigations involving cosmogenic dating. A facility
dedicated to both sample preparation and the analysis of 26A1, 10Be and 36C1 would be a
tremendous asset for studies of the age of surficial features and for determinations of
paleo-elevation. In addition to support for large research centers, there is also a need for
refinement of the production rates of cosmogenic nuclides, and for the development and
application of new isotope systems.
Figure 24. Thermochronometers that are in current use, and their effective closure
temperatures (adapted from P. Fitzgerald, S. Baldwin, G. Gehrels, P. Reiners, and
M. Ducea).
These questions pose significant technical challenges that necessitate the
development of new experimental and analytical facilities. In the past decade significant
advances have been made in the use of the gas apparatus for determination of rheology
and hydromechanical properties with the advent of the Paterson rig. While there are
currently two such rigs in the U.S., eight others are located in Europe, as a result of
superior funding and prioritization of this research. With the establishment and growth of
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rock deformation laboratories and analytic facilities such as new scanning electron
microscopes capable of measuring fabrics by EBSD, European countries have taken the
lead in studies of crustal and mantle rheology.
Several laboratories in this country have the shear and triaxial compression rigs
capable of studying frictional instability and failure mode of crustal rocks. However,
there has only been one new rig established in a US academic institution in the past
decade, while five new machines have been developed for such endeavors in Tokyo,
Kyoto and Tsukuba. There is an urgent need to implement the infrastructure that would
nurture the necessary technological advances, provide the wider availability of existing
experimental and analytical facilities, and encourage synergistic collaborations among
researchers in rock mechanics, field geology, numerical simulation and materials science.
Geodetic Studies
There have been dramatic improvements in our ability to measure the position and
relative movement of different regions of the earth's surface. The Global Positioning
System (GPS) permits us to determine the location of any point on the earth's surface to
within a millimeter or so. As a result, we can measure the relative velocity of any two
points on the earth's surface to within a fraction of a millimeter per year, after just 2-3
years of monitoring. Similarly, interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) allows us
to create maps showing the movement of broad areas of the surface over time (surface
velocity fields). Combined, these two methods will soon yield seamless, high spatial- and
temporal-resolution maps of surface movement across entire plate boundary systems.
Because of the power of these techniques to measure short-term tectonic motion, it is
important that structural geology and tectonics researchers participate in the design of
future experiments to gather and interpret this type of information.
Satellite-based geodesy is one area in which establishment of one or more dedicated
research centers in the U.S. would be more effective than individual or small-group
research programs. At present, the Earthscope initiative is laying plans for dense geodetic
coverage of the western part of the United States. However, a solid geodetic
infrastructure, through continued support of the University Navstar Consortium
(UNAVCO), will be necessary for projects involving active deformation outside of the
western US. This infrastructure should include GPS instrumentation available for
campaign-style geodetic surveys, expertise in the development of continuous GPS
monitoring, and a readily accessible community database of InSAR imagery that may be
processed and analyzed by small teams of investigators.
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Introduction
Within the context of developments in the fields of structural geology and tectonics
(SG&T), we recognize a number of challenges and opportunities in geoscience education
that range from K-12 and public outreach through undergraduate and graduate education.
While it is beyond the scope of this document to address all of these issues, we have
identified some unifying themes that were raised at the workshop and in subsequent
discussions, which are summarized below.
Educational priorities in SG&T parallel those of the broader Earth Science
community, as articulated in a rich literature of ongoing publications, web sites and
workshops. Fundamental scientific literacy, rigorous scientific methodology, and the
development of quantitative skills at all levels, from K-12 through undergraduate and
graduate education, underlie these priorities. Many scholars have discussed the need for
integrating quantitative methods into geoscience classes, interactive exercises,
involvement of students in research, and computer visualization tools as viable strategies
for increasing the effectiveness of earth science education. Geoscience education based
on such a foundation will play an important role in preparing the next generation of
researchers, teachers, and citizens for future challenges. Here we focus on a few priorities
that are especially relevant for SG&T education.
Research in structural geology and tectonics is becoming increasingly quantitative
while retaining its orientation as a field-based, observationally motivated science. The
integration, for example, of structural, petrologic, geochemical, stratigraphic,
geomorphologic and geochronologic studies permits us to produce conceptual models
that can be used as a foundation for analytical and numerical models that test hypotheses
generated in the field. This process-based approach has already started to yield exciting
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Interdisciplinary Education
We anticipate that the next generation of students will have unprecedented
opportunities and needs to work across disciplinary boundaries. Indeed, many of the
research targets that we have identified elsewhere in this document will require input
from, and interaction with, geoscientists in the fields of hydrology, petrology, low- and
high-temperature geochemistry, stratigraphy, geodesy, seismology, and geomorphology,
as well as with experts from other sciences. Many of the research targets also admit input
from the engineering disciplines including civil and mechanical engineering, chemical
engineering, computer science and materials science. We thus need to ensure that
students are given the tools to facilitate this cross-disciplinary research. The necessary
tools include: (1) an emphasis in all geoscience courses on cross-disciplinary
communication skills, and (2) appropriate course content from both the earth sciences
and from allied disciplines (math, physics, chemistry, and biology). In light of this need,
we make the following recommendations:
Not everyone can be an expert in all topics, and thus collaborative efforts will
continue to be essential to move our science forward. We recommend placing
increased emphasis on collaborative projects, papers, proposals, and
presentations in many geoscience courses, at both the undergraduate and
graduate levels. Although such work can be difficult to initiate and evaluate,
it helps to develop the skills necessary for successful communication with
colleagues.
Undergraduate Education
Here we emphasize the need for improved quantitative skills in mathematics and
statistics, information technology, physics, and chemistry in undergraduate curricula. All
geoscience students entering graduate school require a strong background in ancillary
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sciences, mathematics and statistics. Anecdotal evidence suggests that our students'
ability to use this background effectively is directly correlated with the degree to which
we successfully integrate quantitative methods into geoscience classes. It is also
important, however, to teach quantitative skills at an accessible level to non-major
undergraduate students, as this contributes to an educated public that can interpret graphs
and plots and evaluate the results of scientific research that bear on public policy.
In addition to the above priorities, we must also keep in mind that what sets us apart
from some other disciplines is our ability to make observations about the natural world
and interpret these observations through critical analysis. It is important that
undergraduate students learn to think critically and solve problems in situations that
simulate the challenges of field work. For this, we encourage teaching of undergraduate
geoscience courses that require students to:
record and interpret primary observations, and collect original data in the
field or lab;
This approach goes beyond the call for a strengthening of curricula with more
mathematics, physics, and chemistry, and stretches into nontraditional settings (field and
lab) where students learn to think and engage in science through their own experience of
inquiry, hypothesis-testing, analysis, and interpretation. The increasing complexities and
uncertainties of a highly technological world require us to synthesize complex and
sometimes contradictory information, and compile it into a coherent understanding of
dynamic systems. Critical-thinking and problem-solving skills gained in this way will
benefit students whether they go on to graduate school, law school, business, teaching, or
public policy, and will therefore benefit society as a whole.
A few examples of related earth-science web resources and recent workshops
include:
Digital Library for Earth System Education (http://dlesecommunity.carleton.edu/)
Science Education Resource Center (http://serc.carleton.edu)
NAGT 'On the Cutting Edge' professional development workshop series
Building Quantitative Skills of Students in Geoscience Courses (NAGT, 2000)
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Graduate Education
As is evident from the research areas highlighted in this document, there are many
paths through which we might train students in more quantitative approaches to structural
and tectonic problems. The exact path chosen by a given researcher will depend on the
hypotheses to be tested and both individual and institutional goals and resources. Beyond
advanced courses in structural geology, tectonics and related geological and geophysical
subjects, graduate training might therefore include (but need not be exclusive to) one or
more of the following: differential equations and linear algebra, thermodynamics,
continuum mechanics, hydrogeology, inverse theory, numerical methods, and/or spatial
statistical analysis.
Because it is beyond the scope of this document to address all of the opportunities
available to teachers at the graduate level, we identify particular examples of two of the
themes introduced above. For the development of quantitative skills we point to the role
of differential geometry in characterizing geological structures. We cite continuum
mechanics as an example of the fundamental scientific literacy necessary for mechanical
modeling in structural geology and tectonics. Finally, the adoption of a rigorous scientific
methodology is illustrated with a flow chart applicable to quantitative investigations. It is
recommended that graduate-level curricula in structural geology and tectonics include
lectures and practical exercises that demonstrate the utility of mathematical concepts
(such as differential geometry), and utilize the solutions of relevant problems from
related disciplines (such as continuum mechanics) for the analysis of tectonic processes.
folding. Analogue models of folds (Figure 25) have played an important role in these
investigations. The results of model experiments, whether physical or numerical, are
compared to descriptions of natural folds to test hypotheses about the folding
mechanisms. However, the various geometrical measures of folds in common use today
are inadequate to describe uniquely the three-dimensional spatial variations in fold shape.
Geological surfaces are sufficiently described by the two fundamental forms of
differential geometry, and the unit normal vectors and principal normal curvatures, kmin
and kmax, can be calculated from these quantities to characterize folded surfaces (Figure
26).
by no means the only physical quantities. In its simplest forms a complete mechanics is
represented by linear elastic theory and the dynamics of linear viscous fluids. However,
relevant constitutive laws are not limited by linearity and isotropy, but include non-linear
material behavior, anisotropic materials, and finite deformation. Also, numerical
solutions using the finite element method or boundary element method, coupled with
high-speed computing, admit consideration of heterogeneous and discontinuous bodies of
complex geometry. Therefore, problems with complex constitutive behavior, boundary
conditions, and geometry are tractable.
Figure 26: Principal normal curvatures for the multiply folded surface shown in
Figure 26. a) Contour plot of kmin. b) Contour plot of kmax. White tic marks are
trajectories of kmin. From S. Bergbauer, PhD Thesis, Stanford University, 2002.
Using a complete mechanics does not result in the simulation of all the details in a
process leading to a particular structure or structural type. Instead, it requires that explicit
choices have been made of constitutive relations, boundary conditions, and initial
conditions, which together with the fundamental laws produce a closed set of relations
from which all results follow. If the model results do not conform in all aspects with the
field data, a more refined model may be formulated by a different choice of these mutable
elements. The explanatory power of simpler models is examined first; often providing
significant physical insight. Then robustness and more detailed simulation are pursued,
thereby providing testable hypotheses and refutable outcomes.
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Contact Information
Dr. David D. Pollard (Chair)
Dept. of Geol. and Env. Sciences
Stanford University
Stanford CA 94305-2115
Phone: 415-723-4679
Email: [email protected]
Dr. Rick Allmendinger
Dept. of Earth & Atm. Sciences
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853-1504
Phone: 607-255-3376
E-mail: [email protected]
Dr. Mark T. Brandon
Dept. of Geology and Geophysics
Yale University
P.O. Box 208109
210 Whitney Avenue
New Haven, CT 06520-8109
Phone: 203-432-3135
Email: [email protected]
Dr. Roland Burgmann
Dept. of Earth and Planetary Science
University of California, Berkeley
307 McCone Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-4767
Phone: 510-643-9545
Email: [email protected]
Dr. Rebecca J. Dorsey
Department of Geological Sciences
1272 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR, 97403-1272
Phone: 541-346-4431
Email: [email protected]
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Dr. An Yin
Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences
University of California, Los Angeles
595 Charles Young Drive East, Box
951567
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567
Phone: 310-825-8752
Email: [email protected]
Dr. Herman B. Zimmerman (EAR Div.
Dir.)
Director, Division of Earth Sciences
The National Science Foundation
4201 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, Virginia 22230, USA
Email: [email protected]
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