JEFFREY G. RYAN
Professor
Assistant Chair,
Geology Department

B.S. Western Carolina University, 1983
Ph.D. Columbia University, 1989

RESEARCH INTERESTS:
Geochemistry and Petrology of Subduction Zones, Modern and Ancient
Geochemical Evolution of the Earth's Mantle
Petrogenesis of Ultramafic Rocks
Appalachian Geology and Tectonics
Meteoritic/Planetary Geochemistry

Geoscience Education

Email address: ryan@shell.cas.usf.edu
Telephone: (813) 974-6492 (office); (813) 974-1598 (lab)

Links to:

Courses

1997-2002 REU Student Research Program in the Blue Ridge Mountains

Bringing MARGINS Science to the Classroom

Graduate Students and Research:

Petrology/Geochemistry/Planetary Research at USF

Current Graduate Students:

Mary Beck (Ph.D) MS Geology: University of Montana. Geoscience Education

Recent  Graduates
Ph.D.:

Ivan Savov (2004) - [B.S. University of Sofia, M.S. Univ. South Florida] Chemical cycling in subduction zones as constrained by forearc ultramafic rocks, ODP Legs 125 and 195   Currently: Postdoctoral Fellow, Smithsonian Institution

Masters:

Eric Tenthorey (1994) - Petrogenesis of Sapphirine-bearing metatroctolites, Buck Creek Mafic-Ultramafic Complex, NC   [Ph.D. Columbia Univ.]  Currently:  Research Fellow, Australian National University

Phil Austin (1995) - B/Be systematics of lavas from the Kamchatka volcanic arc

Suzie Norrell (1998) - Petrogenesis of Alkaline lavas, Eastern Siberia

Michael Emilio (1998) - Metamorphic and Tectonic Evolution of Buck Creek Ultramafic Complex, Southern Appalachians

Ivan Savov (1999) - Petrogenesis of the Balkan-Carpathian Ophiolite Complex, Bulgaria and Serbia

Monica Palaseanu (Environmental Science and Policy) (2001) - A study of Metals Contamination in Baia Mare City, Romania

Livio Tornabene (2001) The Gatun Structure: Geological assessment of a newly recognized impact structure near Gatun Lake in the Republic de Panama (An E-Thesis: Check it out!!)  [Currently: Ph.D. candidate, Univ. Tennessee]

Andy Van Cleave (2003) - Bioprecipitates in Mg-silicate/carbonate systems: insights into ALH84001 carbonate genesis.

Judy Harden - (2005) B.S. Li isotope and B-Be-Li studies of "hotspot" and other intraplate volcanic rocks, and an educational application

The science I do is very strongly instrument-based: I examine unusual and often difficult-to-measure elemental and isotopic tracers in rocks and waters as a means of gaining new insights into the origins and history of these materials, and to characterize and understand large-scale geochemical processes in the Earth. Toward these ends I manage the Geology department's rock analysis laboratories, which currently include a DC plasma emission spectrometer, our primary in-house tool for elemental analysis in rocks; and an X-ray powder diffractometer for the identification of minerals. We also prepare rock samples for trace metal analysis, particularly for Rare Earth Element (REE) studies, making use of ICP-MS facilities at the University of Boston, and other labs.  My ongoing collaborations with researchers at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, and at the University of Maryland at College Park, provides us with access to these extensive analytical labs, including thermal ionization mass spectrometry facilities for traditional radiogenic isotopes, and their new doubly focusing, multicollector ICP-source MS instruments for B and Li isotopic analyses. A new addition to our in-house analytical capabilities (funded by NSF) is a regional electron microprobe/SEM facility. The instruments are housed at Florida International University, in the Florida Center for Analytical Electron Microscopy , and we have remote operation capabilities at USF via an Internet 2 operational link, which means that we run the instrument in real time off of our desktop computers in Tampa.

I currently maintain active research programs on modern subduction zones, and on the origins and metamorphic/tectonic evolution of igneous rock units in the southern Appalachians.

My subduction zone studies follow two separate, but related tracks:
1) Elemental fluxes in subduction zones. Tracers such as Li, B, 11/10B and 10/9Be indicate that materials and particularly fluids from the subducting plate are involved in the generation of lavas at volcanic arcs. I am examining a wide variety of volcanic and metamorphic materials to constrain the physical processes behind fluid-mediated slab/mantle chemical exchanges, and to quantify chemical fluxes between the Earth's surface and its deep interior. My most recent efforts have involved examining lithium isotope variations in suites of arc lavas, volcanic rocks from several different "hotspot" settings, and in arc mantle-derived ultramafic xenoliths with the goal of characterizing both subduction-related fluxes of Li into the mantle, and to try and identify subduction-generated Li reservoirs in the mantle.

2) The petrogenesis of igneous and metamorphic rocks at subduction zones. I am studying the origins of igneous rocks from a variety of volcanic arcs (the Woodlark Basin/New Georgia volcanic arc, the Mexican Volcanic Belt, Kuril-Kamchatka arc, the Central American volcanic arc, and the Aleutians, among others). I have also been examining the origins and history of subduction-related metamorphic rocks, including samples from the "subduction complex" association of the Catalina Schist (Calif.), and in particular samples of diapiric serpentinites extruding as seamounts in the forearc regions of the Marianas and Izu-Bonin arcs.

The mass transfer pathways indicated by our forearc and cross-arc studies have led us to examine the role that subduction plays in defining the chemical signature of the deep mantle. A recently funded project examined the B and Li isotopic systematics of lavas from Mt. Erebus, Antarctica, with the intention of identifying subducted components in the deep mantle sources of intraplate lavas.  Newly funded research will use Li isotope systematics along with B-Be-Li abundance systematics to assess the development of mantle heterogeneities in subduction systems, focusing on off-axis volcanism in Mexico and Guatemala; and to fully characterize the OIB-source mantle reservoirs for Li isotopes.

My Appalachian research focuses primarily on unraveling the metamorphic evolution and igneous origins of mafic/ultramafic rock associations in southwest North Carolina. These units are emplaced as part of late Precambrian-age basement and lowermost cover sequence rocks, which represent forearc lithologies of an ancient subduction system. In concert with Dr. Virginia Peterson of Grand Valley State University and Dr. Steve Yurkovich at Western Carolina University,  I pursue a combined field and laboratory-based research program oriented toward undergraduates, which has focused on chemically characterizing the major rock units in the region, and on detailed mapping and structural analysis efforts to infer the current orientation and deformational history of the ultramafic units. Graduate student projects have focused on a careful documentation of the metamorphic histories of these units, as a tool to use in the reconstruction of their tectonic histories. Our most recent efforts (work-in-progress presented at the 2004 GSA SE-NE Sectional Meeting) have involved identifying occurrences of Precambrian age mafic rocks within the Ashe Metamorphic Suite and associated units of the Eastern and Central Blue Ridge, between Sylva and Burnsville, NC.

My work on Appalachian mafic-ultramafic associations (thanks in large part to a highly motivated graduate student!) has expanded to include the study of the Balkan-Carpathian and Rhodopean ophiolites in the Balkans, which, though substantially less metamorphosed than the complexes we examine in the Blue Ridge, may be time correlative and thus may relate to the same global episode of extension. Aspects of our research on Appalachian ultramafics and of subduction zone fluxes are currently trying to dovetail, as we begin to pursue (from both perspectives) the examination of small, podiform ultramafic bodies in the Blue Ridge and Piedmont belts of NC and VA, some of which preserve textures and mineralogies remarkably similar to those of the Mariana forearc serpentinites. 

A fledgling field of inquiry in my lab, born of an undergraduate course ( GLY 4045: Moons, Planets, and Meteors: see below) and the excitment and energy of students from that class, relates to meteor impacts, meteorite geochemistry and planetary sciences.  I'm collaborating with Harry McSween and coworkers at the University of Tennesee at Knoxville on examining B-Be-Li abundance variations in SNC meteorites via ion microprobe and other means. I am also bringing this effort into the classroom in an Honors College offering where Honor Natural Science course students learn the methods for, and participate in, the identificattion of meteorites, and the exploration of new imagery coming back from active Mars orbiting probes.

Some of my most recent scholarly efforts relate to my interests (and recent experiences) in geoscience education. I am involved in two active NSF Course, Curriclum and Laboratory Improvement Program projects: the first examines the use of remote instrumentation in the classroom, making use of the FCAEM SEM and microprobe; and the second focuses on the development and testinng of multidisciplinary geoscience educational materials ("MARGINS Mini-Lessons") based on the data and discoveries supported by the NSF-MARGINS Program. I am also engaged in an effort to define "characteristic suites" of igneous and metamorphic rocks for classroom use - this project is running as a series of graduate and undergraduate field and seminar courses, focusing on the geology of the Grayson Highlands region of SW Virginia, with the objective of establishing reference suites of samples from the volcanogenic Mount Rogers Formation, and overlying sedimentary units of the Konnarock Formation and Chilhowee Group. 

I am working with my USF colleague Dr. Len Vacher to develop a geoscience education graduate degree track at USF, to try and meet the needs of a growing number of students who want to pursue graduate training in Geology toward teaching in secondary education community colleges and small four-year institutions, where the need for such an instructional skillset is critical. Please contact me if you are interested in pursuing an MS or Ph.D. degree in Geology with an educational focus!

Funded Research Grants and Contracts

Current Science - Abstracts of Recent Presentations at National and International Meetings.

REU Program Results: Publications and Presentations at GSA SE-Section and National Meetings.

Publications and Links Thereto

 

Link to USF Geology Homepage