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Surface Processes and Paleoclimate
Faculty and students are currently investigating a wide array of surface Earth processes, many of which play a direct role in monitoring Earth paleoclimate. Recent research projects include:
  • sedimentary environment, diagenesis, and reservoir characteristics of the Ferron sandstone in east-central Utah;
  • paleoclimate and paleoecology studies using paleosols and fossil tooth enamel as geochemical proxies;
  • geomorphic evolution of fault scarps and their role in evaluating seismic hazards;
  • borehole thermal gradients as long-term records of earth surface paleotemperatures and global warming;
  • Antarctic drillholes as recorders of Tertiary paleoclimate change;
  • sedimentary paleoenvironments of the Mesozoic in the Colorado Plateau area;
  • dating of erosion surfaces with cosmogenic nuclides;
  • regional paleohydrology and diagenesis of Jurassic sandstones, Arches-Canyonlands region.

Faculty: Bruhn, Cerling, Chan, Chapman, Jarrard, C. Johnson, Roth.

 

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Prof. R. Jarrard taking a break from paleoclimate research in Antarctica.

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Cover article of Geophysical Research Letters, by Research Assist. Prof. R. Harris and Prof. D. Chapman, on a global study of paleotemperatures based on borehole temperature measurements.

Fossils, like this Utaspis Marjumensis, Provide Key Clues About Our Planet's Past

Department of Geology and Geophysics
135 S. 1460 E, Room 719 • Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0111 • Phone: (801) 581-7062
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