Scholar Profiles
Kelly
Deuerling
2006 - 2007 University Scholar
Mentor: John Jaeger
College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences
"Over the course of the year, I hope to hone my skills as a field scientist and learn the art of lab work and writing research papers. From Dr. Jaeger, I’m learning that there is much more to being a field scientist than meets the eye, though the upsides far outweigh the down. I’m also learning more about the process of field and lab work and writing and how it plays into the different fields of geology."
Kelly is a junior majoring in both geology and zoology. Her primary academic interests are in the areas of geochemistry and tropical ecology. This budding field scientists also manages to find time to be a member of the Wetlands Club, Geology Club, Hillel knitting circle, Storm Water Ecological Enhancement Project, Golden Key International Honors Society, and a volunteer for ELI Conservation. In her spare time she enjoys hiking, biking and knitting.
Research Description:
The Onset of Alpine Glaciation in the Wrangell Volcanic Field, Alaska
It
has long been known that glacial conditions existed in Eurasia and North
America prior to the Pliocene, though exact timing and location of permanent
ice fields is not known. By better constraining these two, hypotheses can be tested
examining the interaction between climatic deterioration and tectonic processes
in Alaska (Jaeger et al., 2001 Gulick et al., 2004).
Fifteen to 10 Ma, Alaska was characterized by a warm and wet climate (White et
al., 1997). Since then there has been a shift to the cool, wet, glacial
conditions of modern times. During the change, Alaska’s coastal mountain
ranges began to rise due to subduction of the Yakutat microplate triggering volcanism
in the Wrangell volcanic field (WVF) (Plafker, 1994). When the mountains
reached a sufficient elevation to trap moisture from storms in the Gulf of Alaska,
alpine glaciation would have begun in earnest (Lagoe 93). My goal is to
establish a more precise indicator through the use of geochemical, mineralogical,
and textural proxies for a shift in weathering environment of the mountains present
at the time. Once done, the proxy records of weathering can be examined
in DSDP and proposed IODP samples from the Gulf of Alaska continental margin
to establish the timing of this climatic change.
The aforementioned hypothesis will be tested by examining the physical and chemical weathering of andesitic/dacitic WVF lavas whose elemental composition has remained constant for 11 Ma (Trop et al., 2005). Miocene-age fluvial mudstone and lava samples are from the Frederika Formation of the northeastern flank of the Wrangells (supplied by Dr. Jeff Trop, Bucknell Univ.) and modern glacially derived samples collected from rivers and glaciers draining the WVF. Elemental composition will be found through x-ray fluorescence. Mineralogical studies will be done using thin section analysis and x-ray diffraction. Textural analysis of silt grains will be done with SEM analysis. The three analytical methods will therefore provide a means of establishing the weathering products from the same source rock but subjected to two very different weathering regimes.
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