The study of the Quaternary Period has a long and illustrious history at the University of Wisconsin - Madison, beginning with T.C. Chamberlin and R.D. Salisbury a century ago. The UW-Madison now has one of the largest, most diverse groups of Quaternary researchers in North America. Interdisciplinary research is a particular strength in the Quaternary program at UW-Madison. Students can pursue an M.S. or Ph.D. in Quaternary studies in one or more of the graduate departments on campus. In addition to course work required for disciplinary or joint degree or degrees, students take appropriate course work in a related minor discipline.
The following is a brief description of areas of interest. Following that is a list of faculty and links to their web sites where available. Finally, a list of cooperating departments also has links to department web pages.
ARCHAEOLOGY, GEOARCHAEOLOGY Concern with the
interrelationships between human adaptation and environmental
conditions during the Quaternary constitutes a long-standing tradition
of courses and research in archaeology at the UW-Madison. Field
research addressing this theme continues in many parts of the world,
including investigations of: subsistence and settlement in the Upper
Mississippi Valley; geoarchaeology and Paleoindian chronologies on the
Great Plains and across eastern North America; settlement, and the
emergence of complex societies in the Americas; hunter-gatherer
adaptations from the Mesolithic to Neolithic and agricultural origins
in Northern Europe; human origins, ethnoarchaeology, and site
formation processes in East Africa; and the origin and collapse of
Harappan civilization and ethnoarchaeology in Pakistan. Topical
research includes: archaeological chemistry; paleodiet studies; GIS in
archaeology; ceramic petrography; archaeology applications of pedology
and soil chemistry; and faunal analysis and taphonomy.
CLIMATE CHANGE & PALEOCLIMATES Much of the
Quaternary-oriented climatological research at UW-Madison concerns the
diagnosing and modeling of past and present climates on continent-wide
and world-wide scales. This work includes using paleoenvironmental
indicators, such as pollen and diatoms, to reconstruct climate changes
over the past 18,000 years and the use of general-circulation and other
climate models to simulate the behavior of past climates in the late
Quaternary and the late Cenozoic. Additional research involves
reconstructing the climatological history of the Great Lakes region
over the past several centuries. Faculty in most of the other areas of
Quaternary studies on campus participate in research that deals with
climate change and paleoclimates.
GLACIOLOGY Glaciological research at UW-Madison is aimed at
determining the physical characteristics of glaciers and ice sheets in
order to understand their past behavior and predict future activity;
West Antarctic ice sheet, especially its fast-moving ice streams.;
paleoglaciology of Pleistocene ice sheets.
GEOMORPHOLOGY Course offerings and research in geomorphology
consist of process geomorphology and landscape evolution. Topical
areas include fluvial, glacial, soils, and coastal geomorphology.
Current faculty research includes: Quaternary landscape evolution of
unglaciated southwestern Wisconsin, focusing on fluvial, pedologic,
and slope processes; glacial history and processes elsewhere in
Wisconsin; Holocene history and shore-line erosion of the Great Lakes;
modern glacier processes in Alaska and the extension of that work in
Wisconsin, New England, and Scandinavia and South America; cosmogenic
dating of moraines and other surfaces; Great Plains late Cenozoic
history of eolian sedimentation, and soil formation.
MARINE GEOLOGY & PALEOCEANOGRAPHY This component of the
Quaternary Studies Program focuses on ocean/climate change as recorded
in deep-sea sediments, with particular emphasis on marine microbiotic
responses to glacial/interglacial oscillations in thermohaline
circulation. We employ marine microfossils (foraminifera) to generate
both biostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic frameworks for studying
the Quaternary evolution of the hydrosphere, atmosphere, and cryosphere.
Our campus is presently home to one of the world's largest collections
of piston cores from the Arctic Ocean basin, a region recently targeted
for future study by the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program. We are also
currently engaged in a collaborative research effort with the USGS to
better understand the Quaternary depositional history of the Blake
Ridge in the North Atlantic, and to evaluate the possible role of
sedimentary methane hydrate dissociation in the genesis of seafloor
topography.
PALEOECOLOGY Paleoecology at UW-Madison includes the study of
plant pollen and spores and other microfossils such as diatoms and
other algae, insect fragments, and carbonized wood for
paleoenvironmental reconstruction. Paleoecologists attempt to deduce
the interactions of past organisms with each other as well as with
their environment and such work is carried out in many different
locations on campus. Paleoecological studies conducted at UW-Madison
span the gamut of settings from terrestrial to limnological to marine,
over an area that extends from the Arctic to the Equator, and include
paleontology, biogeography, botany, limnology, zoology, and ecology.
QUATERNARY STRATIGRAPHY Quaternary stratigraphy is one of
the oldest subareas of Quaternary studies and it is well represented
on campus. Research emphasizes the glacial and loess stratigraphy of
the upper Midwest, the late Quaternary alluvial stratigraphy of the
unglaciated portions of the upper Midwest, the mapping of surficial
deposits in Wisconsin, and the geochronology of the late Pleistocene
glaciation in Wisconsin. On the Great Plains, stratigraphic research
includes the soil-stratigraphy and geochronology of eolian and
lacustrine deposits and valley fills.
PEDOLOGY Pedological research focuses on soil genesis, pedologic modeling, and soil-landscape relationships on multiple scales. Current research includes: pedogenic evolution of glaciated and marginal terrains of the upper Midwest, dynamics in forested and organic soils and in permafrost-affected landscapes of northern Alaska, as well as studies of pedogenic successions in semi-arid regions of Patagonia and Costa Rica. Soil-geomorphic research emphasizes chronosequences, the use of soils as landscape development/age indicators, and interactions of eolian and pedogenic processes. Paleopedologic studies emphasize using quantifiable soil information (i.e., morphology and geochemistry) from present day settings as interpretive analogs for paleoenvironmental conditions as expressed in paleosols.
APPLIED QUATERNARY STUDIES
Students can concentrate in Quaternary studies, attain an MS degree,
and work in resource management for agencies or consulting firms. The
faculty have research interests in the hydrologic properties of
surficial materials, stream hydrology and related topics, shoreline
erosion, and other aspects of applied geomorphology. In addition, the
university has faculty in several departments involved in
hydrogeology, hydrology, soil mechanics, soils, agricultural
engineering, as well as many other departments in policy areas. Many
students in applied Quaternary studies also take a degree in Water
Resources Management. The Geological
Engineering Program offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in
applied aspects of geology.
FACILITIES AND OTHER PROGRAMS
The UW-Madison campus has extensive, modern research facilities and
library holdings for all of the specialty areas of Quaternary studies.
All participating departments also have instructional and research
computers and access to main-frame units. The Department of
Anthropology has large archaeological collections, comparative
collections of plant and animal remains, an inductively-coupled plasma
spectrometer for elemental analyses, an isotope-ratio mass
spectrometer, and equipment and facilities for microwear analysis of
lithic artifacts, GIS, and for ceramic petrography. Very well-equipped
laboratories exist in the Department of Geography for sedimentologic
and pedologic analyses. Field equipment is available for electronic
surveying, hydrologic studies, and hydraulic coring and drilling. The
department also houses a state-of-the-art facility for map design and
production, and labs for GIS. The Department of Geology &
Geophysics has laboratories and equipment for pollen, sediment, rock,
mineral, isotope, and image analyses, as well as a well equipped
micropaleontology lab. Equipment is available for geophysical surveys,
terrestrial coring and drilling, and lake coring. The Department of
Soil Science has facilities for comprehensive physical, chemical,
micromorphological, mineralogical, biochemical, and microbiological
analyses of soils and unconsolidated sediments. The department has a
drilling/coring rig, access to automated soils databases, and a full
array of soil-hydrological monitoring equipment. The Department of
Botany houses the Wisconsin State Herbarium, with extensive recent and
historical collections from Wisconsin and the world. Equipment and
expertise are available for high resolution imaging of microscopic and
macroscopic fossils, charcoal analysis, and interpretation of fossil
assemblage data. The Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and
the Center for Climatic Research (CCR) are well equipped for climate
modeling and paleoclimatic reconstruction. Laboratory facilities are
available for dendrochronology and pollen research. The CCR is a
component of the Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies,
which also administers the "Climate, People, and Environment Program."
This interdisciplinary program includes the study of both past and
present environmental changes and their relationship to humans and
human ecology.
Other facilities available on campus include extensive comparative collections in the Zoological Museum, a collection of exotic woods at the USDA Forest Products Laboratory on campus, and the holdings, facilities, and personnel of the Wisconsin State Historical Society. Off campus, but closely tied to UW are the personnel and facilities of the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey.
QUATERNARY FACULTY & STAFF (including emeritus professors)
John W. Attig jwattig@facstaff.wisc.edu (Geological & Natural History Survey). Glacial process; Quaternary geology of midwest, Scandinavia; geomorphology.
Ajing Zhu axing@geography.wisc.edu (Geography) Geographic information science and remote sensing techniques, artificial intelligence, fuzzy logic, and their application in environmental modelling and resource management.Charles R. Bentley bentley@geology.wisc.edu (Geology & Geophysics, Emertus). Ice sheet glaciology and geophysics of Antarctica, Greenland, and ice caps of the Canadian Arctic; past and future response of ice sheets to climatic change.
James G. Bockheim bockheim@facstaff.wisc.edu (Soil Science) Quaternary soils, polar pedology, soil chronosequences use of soils in relative-age dating; soil development in high-latitude and alpine regions; forest biogeochemistry.
Waltraud A. R. Brinkmann brinkmann@geography.wisc.edu (Geography and Center for Climatic Research, Emeritus). Climatology; climate variability and climate change; dendrochronology.
Reid A. Bryson rabryson@facstaff.wisc.edu (Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences and Center for Climatic Research, Emeritus). Quantitative reconstruction of Holocene climates; causes of climate change; application of paleoclimatic information to the design of forecast systems; high resolution site-specific climate modelling.
Henry T. Bunn htbunn@facstaff.wisc.edu (Anthropology). Human evolution; evolution of human diet and early Pleistocene hominid behavior in Africa; ethnoarchaeology of hunter-gatherers.
James Burt jburt@geography.wisc.edu (Geography) Climatology, climate models; GIS
James Burton jhburton@facstaff.wisc.edu (Anthropology) Procurement and exchange studies; artifact characterization methods; chemical methods in paleodiet studies; American Southwest, Northern Andes.
Lee Clayton lclayton@facstaff.wisc.edu (Geological & Natural History Survey). Geomorphology; Pleistocene history of Laurentide Ice Sheet and associated lake and river history; glacial process.
Stefan L. Hastenrath slhasten@facstaff.wisc.edu (Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences, Emeritus). Paleoclimate and glaciers of the tropics.
Thomas S. Hooyer tshooyer@facstaff.wisc.edu (Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey) Glacial geolog, subglacial procesess on modrn glaciers; Quaternary history.
Sara C. Hotchkiss shotchkiss@wisc.edu (Botany, Center for Climatic Research) Paleoecology; Quaternary climate historyecosystem dynamics;human/ecosystem interaction and landscape history.
D. Clay Kelly ckelly@geology.wisc.edu (Geology and Geophysics)Micropaleontology; paleooceanography, record of climate change.
J. Mark Kenoyer jkenoyer@facstaff.wisc.edu (Anthropology). Prehistory of South Asia; Paleolithic, Neolithic, ethnic archaeology.
James C. Knox knox@geography.wisc.edu (Geography). Geomorphology; paleohydrology; Quaternary history of the Upper Mississippi Valley; influence of climate and land-use change on erosion and sedimentation.
John E. Kutzbach jek@facstaff.wisc.edu (Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences and Center for Climatic Research, Emeritus). Paleoclimatology; quantitative evaluation of climate change; modelling of climate change.
Zhengyu Liu zliu3@facstaff.wisc.edu (Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences and Center for Climatic Research) Coupled ocean-atmosphere-land system paleoclimate modeling; decadal climatevariability)
Frederick W. Madison (Soil Science and Geological & Natural History Survey). Soil genesis and morphology; soil-landscape relationships, formation and genesis of organic soils and soils on mining waste.
Louis J. Maher, Jr. maher@geology.wisc.edu (Geology & Geophysics, Emeritus). Quaternary palynology of midwestern and western America as it pertains to the region's vegetation and climate history; statistics of relative and absolute pollen data.
Joseph Mason (Geography) Quaternary history and paleoclimate
of the Great Plains, soil, eolian and hillslope geomorphology, loess
stratigraphy.
Kevin McSweeney kmcsween@facstaff.wisc.edu (Soil Science). Soil genesis and morphology, application of microscopy to study of soils and unconsolidated sediments, soil-landscape relationships.
David M. Mickelson mickelson@geology.wisc.edu (Geology & Geophysics, Emeritus). Glacial geology; glacial stratigraphy of midwest; landform genesis in Alaska and Wisconsin; till genesis.
T. Douglas Price tdprice@facstaff.wisc.edu (Anthropology). Human adaptation during early Post-glacial of Europe; transition from hunting/gathering to farming; reconstruction of environment during post-glacial time.
Patricia Sanford psanford@facstaff.wisc.edu (Center for Climatic Research) Paleolimnology, paleoecology.
Sissel Schroeder sschroeder2@wisc.edu (Anthropology). Archaeology of eastern North America; complex societies; historical ecology; settlement patterns; GIS.
Bradley S. Singer bsinger@geology.wisc.edu (Geology and Geophysics) Geochronology, igneous geochemistry; cosmogenic dating of Quaternary surfaces.
Richard W. Slaughter rich@geology.wisc.edu (Geology and Geophysics). Quaternary vertebrates of the Midwest; end-Pleistocene extinctions; taphonomy of bone deposits.
Cynthia A. Stiles castiles@wisc.edu (Soil Science) Soil geochemistry and weathering sequence mineralogy; paleosol interpretation; pedogenic /weathering progression and modeling; soil geochemistry in archaeological studies.
James B. Stoltman stoltman@facstaff.wisc.edu (Anthropology, Emeritus). Prehistory of eastern North America; geoarchaeology; human paleoecology of the Driftless Area; thin section analysis of ceramics.
Tom R. Vale vale@geography.wisc.edu (Geography,
Emeritus). Biogeography; history of successions in western U.S.
mountains.
Jack Williams jww@geography.wisc.edu (Geography) Vegetation dynamics, paleoclimatology, global environments.
Marjorie J. Winkler mwinkler@facstaff.wisc.edu (Center for Climatic Research). Paleoecology and palynology; Holocene climate change.
Arne Winguth amwinguth@facstaff.wisc.edu (Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences and Center for Climatic Research) Ocean circulation at the last glacial maximum (inverse modeling),; geochemical cycles in the ocean.
Cornelia Winguth cwinguth@facstaff.wisc.edu (Geology and Geophysics and Center for Climatic Research) Modeling the Laurentide and Scandinavian Ice Sheets for the last glacial cycle.
Jason Yaeger jyaeger@wisc.edu (Anthropology).
Archaeology of Central and South America; ethnohistory; household
archaeology; social organization; material cultura and identity; Maya
epigraphy and iconography.
For more information about any of the programs mentioned above:
Department of Anthropology
1180 Observatory Drive
http://www.wisc.edu/anthropology
Department of Atmospheric and
Oceanic Sciences
1225 West Dayton Street
http://www.aos.wisc.edu
Department of Botany
430 Lincoln Drive
http://www.botany.wisc.edu
Department of Geography
550 North Park Street
http://geography.wisc.edu
Department of Geology and
Geophysics
1215 West Dayton Street
http://www.geology.wisc.edu
Department of Soil Science
1525 Observatory Drive
http://soils.wisc.edu
Center for Climatic Research
1225 West Dayton Street
http://ccr.meteor.wisc.edu
Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental
Studies
550 North Park Street
http://www.ies.wisc.edu/
The University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706
Updated 12/05/05 by David M. Mickelson