site last updated
September 9 , 2007


Mark T. Brandon
Professor of Geology and Geophysics
Department of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University
P.O. Box 208109, 210 Whitney Avenue
New Haven, CT 06520-8109, USA
Tel: (203) 432-3135; Fax: (203) 432-3134



Above: Mark Brandon (on the right) talking with a Buddhist monk at
the Monastery at Puli, a field trip stop for the Taiwan Penrose Conference.
Numerous landslides, visible in the mountains in the background, were
triggered by the 1999 Chi-Chi earthquake. Photo by Peter Reiners.

LINKS: [Vita] [Publications and Reprints] [Abstracts] [Courses and Field Trips]

SOFTWARE: [BinomFit] [Thermochronology programs] [Deformation-analysis programs] [Deconvolution program]

NEWS
• Kirk Bryan Award to David Montgomery and Mark Brandon, October, 2006
• Fuller et al., Geology 2006 provide a new mechanistic explanation for the location of great earthquakes at subduction zones.

See press releases from Yale and University of Washington.
The Yale release contains narrated versions of the two movies associated with the publication.
NSF Continental Dynamics RETREAT project, synconverent extension in the northern Apennines, 2002-2007
Penrose Conference: Tectonics, Climate and Landscape Evolution, Jan 13-17, 2003
New Departures in Structural Geology and Tectonics, report to National Science Foundation, 2003
Kirk Bryan Award to Frank Pazzaglia and Mark Brandon, October, 2002

RESEARCH
Much of my current research is focused on the tectonic evolution of convergent wedges. We have active projects in several modern convergent wedges, including the Apennines of northern Italy, the Hellenic subduction wedge as exposed in Crete, Greece; and the Cascadia subduction wedge in western Washington State. The main objective is to understand the interplay between accretion, erosion, and wedge growth. Our tools are structural geology, thermochronology, geomorphology, and tectonic synthesis. Both the Apennines and Hellenic wedges show evidence of pervasive horizontal extension in the direction of convergence. Our work indicates that both slab rollback and deep accretion (underplating) are significant factors in driving this synconvergent extension. (Click here to see more about our NSF-CD RETREAT project in northern Italy). Other active research include using detrital thermochronology to study the exhumational history of the European Alps, and using leaf shape analysis to estimate mean annual temperature and terrane offset along the western margin of North America. We are just starting a new project to study the interplay between glacial erosion and wedge growth in the Patagonian Andes. The goal is to test the "glacial buzz saw" hypothesis, which states that alpine glaciers control the upper limit of the orogenic topography in the Andes.

POST DOCTORAL FELLOWS
Stuart Thomson
2003-present, thermochronology, Apennines of Italy, Southern Andes, He and FT dating

GRADUATE STUDENTS
Madalyn Blondes
2003-present, Ph.D. student, mantle melting as imaged by monogenic basaltic vents in eastern California
Devin McPhillips 2005-present, Ph.D. student, thermochronology and active tectonics
Cristian Vasquez, 2007, visiting from University of Chile, Santiago; thermochronology in the Southern Andes, He and FT dating

FORMER ASSOCIATES
Ian Miller
Ph.D. 2006, student, paleofloral estimates of tectonic offset for Baja British Columbia; now post-doc at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science
James Stevenson
Ph.D. 2006, melting of eclogites, Tromso nappe, northern Norway; now a risk analyst at Eraring Energy in Sidney, Australia
Nicole Gasparini
2003-5, geomorphology and surface processes; now a post-doc at University Arizona at Tempe
Jeremy Hourigan
Post-doc 2003-5, Thermochronology, geochronology, and tectonics in Kamchatka and Apennines; now Assistant Professor at UC Santa Cruz
Jeff Rahl Ph.D. 2005, tectonics of the Hellenic subduction wedge; now Assistant Professor, Washington and Lee University
Jonathan Tomkin
Post-doc 2000-2, geodynamics and surface process modeling; now Associate Director, School of Earth , Society, & Environment, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champain
Matthias Bernet
Ph.D. 2002, detrital thermochronology and tectonics; now Assistant Professor at University of Grenoble, France
Geoff Batt
Post doc 1997-2000, thermochronology and tectonics; now Lecturer at Royal Hollaway University, Great Britain
Jessica Graybill
M.Sc. 2000, tectonics; now assistant professor in Geography, at Colgate College
Meinert Rahn
Post-doc 1997-98, fission-track dating and tectonics; now at Swiss Federal Nuclear Safety Inspectorate
Meg Coleman
Post-doc 1997, thermochronology and tectonics; now faculty in Marine Education at Southern Maine Community College
Jeff Feehan
Ph.D. 1997, stain analysis and fluid flow in Late Cretaceous San Juan-Cascades thrust system; now fully devoted to wind surfing
Martin Olsen Ph.D. 1996, experimental deformation of porous sandstones; now a Exploration Geophysist working for Aspect Energy in Budapest, Hungary
Frank Pazzaglia
Post-doc 1993-94, tectonic geomorphology; now Associate Professor at Lehigh University
Uwe Ring
Post-doc 1993-94, structural geology and tectonics; now Assistant Professor at U Canterbury, New Zealand

[return to G&G home page]