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Earth and Space Sciences Faculty

Portrait Photo

George Bergantz
Professor

Office: Johnson Hall 327    (Mailing Address)
Phone: 206-685-4972
Fax: 206-543-0489 (shared)
E-Mail: bergantz*
* to send email, replace * with @u.washington.edu

Areas of Interest:
Physical Petrology

Research Groups:
Petrology/Mineralogy/Geochemistry
Structural Geology, Tectonics and Geodynamics
Volcanology

Education:
Ph.D., Earth and Planetary Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University, 1988
M.S., Geophysics, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1985

Current Research and Graduate Students:
Physical Petrology Group Website

Bergantz's interests are in the quantitative treatment of geologic transport processes at a variety of scales and in a variety of settings. The physical petrology group has as its main emphasis the physics of magmas, hydrothermal systems, metamorphism and eruption processes. The students develop and use a diverse suite of tools to address these systems: numerical and laboratory experiments, geological and geophysical measurements, and the theoretical foundations of physical chemistry and continuum mechanics. All students are encouraged to do fieldwork and to develop transport models in a sensible geological context.

The projects currently underway address the geological expression of magmatism at different crustal levels. These studies provide complementary elements for the view that the generation of petrologic diversity and magmatism is a crustal-scale process. To this end, the group is working on tying together the process of melt generation and transport in the deep crust and mantle, the ascent and hybridization of magmas in the mid-crust and the assembly and life-cycles of volcanic systems. One of the most challenging aspects of this program is identifying elements from the geological record that are diagnostic of the time and length scales of magmatism.

Graduate Students:

Selected Publications:
See selected publications on Physical Petrology Group website.



Last Modified:2/10/2003


Earth and Space Sciences

( Geology, Geophysics, Geological Sciences)
University of Washington
Johnson Hall 070 •  Box 351310
4000 15th Avenue NE • Seattle, WA  98195-1310
Phone 206-543-1190  •  Fax 206-543-0489 
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