Volcanology at New Mexico Tech
New Mexico Tech has has broad interdisciplinary research and teaching interests in volcanology and magmatic systems, both in
the Earth and Environmental
Science Department and the New
Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources. Many research
projects are ongoing within the state of New Mexico as well as
around the world (including an historically strong and continuing program
in Antarctica). We host a range of analytical
facilities (listed below) that are particularly well-suited to geochemical
analysis of volcanic products and dating of volcanic eruptions. Opportunities for research projects
in volcanology are available at levels ranging from undergraduate through Ph.D.
A large number of volcanic features are readily accessible from the
Socorro area. The town sits on the margin of a caldera that produced
a large, Oligocene ignimbrite; part of the Mogollon-Datil volcanic
field and seismological investigations indicate that a substantial magma body resides in the mid-crust today. The young, basaltic, and extremely well-preserved Carizozo
lava flow is nearby, as is the Valles Caldera, Mount Taylor stratovolcano,
the Grants Malpais Volcanic Field, and many other small basaltic
and rhyolitic volcanic centers.
Research Interests
Rick
Aster, Professor of Geophysics, Department of Earth and Environmental Science.
Co-Principal Investigator, Mount Erebus Volcano Observatory, volcano seismology, the Socorro magma body, and
Italian volcanic fields.
Current field programs in Antarctica.
Richard
Chamberlin, Senior Field Geologist, N.M. Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources.
Mapping of volcanic rocks, particularly in caldera-related areas
and areas of active tectonism.
Chuck
Chapin, Emeritus Director and State Geologist, N.M. Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources.
K-metasomatism; volcanology and evolution of the Rio Grande Rift;
volcanic geology of the 49-mile volcanic field, Colorado.
Nelia
Dunbar, Geochemist, N.M. Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources.
Manager, electron microprobe laboratory, tephrochronology of blue ice areas Antarctica; in-situ vitrification
analogs of lava lakes; pre-eruptive volatile contents as determined
by ion-microprobe; K-metasomatism; volatile zonation in ignimbritic
eruptions.
Jeffrey Johnson, Assistant Professor of Geophysics, Department of Earth and Environmental Science.
Eruptive proccesses, integrated geophysical/vocanological modeling, current field programs in Central America.
Matthew Heizler, Geochronologist, N.M. Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources.
Co-director, New Mexico Geochronology Research Laboratory, 40Ar/39Ar thermochronology.
Philip
R. Kyle, Professor of Geochemistry, Department of Earth and Environmental Science.
Principal Investigator, Mount Erebus Volcano Observatory,
Antarctica, volcanic gas emission rates, volcano surveillance
by COSPEC, tephra studies; geochemistry of volcanic rocks. Current
field programs in Antarctica.
Bill
McIntosh, Volcanologist, , N.M. Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Associate Professor of Geochemistry, Department of Earth and Environmental Science
Co-director, New Mexico Geochronology Research Laboratory, 40Ar/39Ar geochronology and paleomagnetism of volcanic rocks in
New Mexico, Texas, Nevada, Colorado and Ross Sea area/Marie Byrd
Land, Antarctica; geological evolution of large ignimbrite volcanic
fields, origin of hydrovolcanic rocks especially subglacial eruptions.
Mark Murray, Associate Research Professor of Geophysics, Department of Earth and Environmental Science.
Crustal deformation and rheology, geodetic measurements, earthquake and volcano hazards.
Allan Sanford, Emeritus Professor of Geophysics, Department of Earth and Environmental Science.
Seismotectonics of the Rio Grande Rift and Socorro Magma Body.
Numerous Ph.D. and M.S. graduate students!
Staff
John Weber, System Specialist
Facilities and Additional Links
Mt. Erebus Volcano Observatory
New Mexico Geochronology Research Laboratory
Infrasonic Volcano Resources Page
West Antarctic Volcano Exploration
Philips PW2400 XRF (purchased July 1994)
Instrumental neutron activation lab.
Electron
microprobe
Stable
isotope lab.
Barringer COSPEC V correlation spectrometer and associated
data acquisition system.
Filter equipment for gas sampling using impregnated filters.
Geochemical analysis lab with full-time analysts and variety
of analytical instruments (NMBMMR).
Portable H2O/CO2 analyser for volcanic and soil gas analysis