Past Articles

*Note this listing up to 2012 is from the AWESOME-RaD group at Syracuse University Earth Sciences*


Fall 2011
39. Dickinson. The place and power of myth in geoscience: an associate editor's perspective. American Journal of Science (2003) vol. 303 pp. 856-864.



38. Ring and Glodny. No need for lithospheric extension for exhuming (U)HP rocks by normal faulting. Journal of the Geological Society (2010) vol. 167 (2) pp. 225-228

36. Liu et al. The role of oceanic plateau subduction in the Laramide orogeny. Nature Geoscience (2010) vol. 3 (5) pp. 353-357


34. Collins et al. Two contrasting Phanerozoic orogenic systems revealed by hafnium isotope data. Nature Geoscience (2011) vol. 4 (5) pp. 333-337

33. Loewy et al. Coats Land crustal block, East Antarctica: A tectonic tracer for Laurentia?. Geology (2011) vol. 39 (9) pp. 859-862

32. Thomson et al. Glaciation as a destructive and constructive control on mountain building. Nature (2010) vol. 467 (7313) pp. 313-317.

30. Grotzinger et al. Enigmatic origin of the largest-known carbon isotope excursion in Earth's history. Nature Geoscience (2011) vol. 4 (5) pp. 285-292.

29. Sobolev et al. A young source for the Hawaiian plume. Nature (2011) pp. 1-6

28. Shirey and Richardson, 2011, Start of the Wilson Cycle at 3 Ga shown by diamonds from the subcontinental mantle: Science, v. 333p. 434-436. 
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Spring 2011
27. Sandiford, M., 2010, Why are the continents just so…?, Journal of Metamorphic Geology, v. 28, pp. 569-577

26. Liu et al. 2000 years of migrating earthquakes in North China: How earthquakes in midcontinents differ from those at plate boundaries. Lithosphere (2011) vol. 3 (2) pp. 128-132

25. Willenbring and Blanckenburg. Long-term stability of global erosion rates and weathering during late-Cenozoic cooling. Nature (2011) vol. 465 (7295) pp. 211-214.

24. Kennedy and Christie-Blick. Condensation origin for Neoproterozoic cap carbonates during deglaciation. Geology (2011) vol. 39 (4) pp. 319-322.

23. Hoffman and Li. A palaeogeographic context for Neoproterozoic glaciation. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (2009) vol. 277 (3-4) pp. 158-172

22. Kent and Irving. Influence of inclination error in sedimentary rocks on the Triassic and Jurassic apparent pole wander path for North America and implications for Cordilleran tectonics. Journal of Geophysical Research (2010) vol. 115 (B10) pp. B10103

21. Meyers, SR, and SE Peters. 2011. A 56 million year rhythm in North American sedimentation during the Phanerozoic. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 303: 174-180.


18. Moucha et al. Deep mantle forces and the uplift of the Colorado Plateau. Geophysical Research Letters (2009) vol. 36 (19) pp. L19310

17. Hornbach et al. High tsunami frequency as a result of combined strike-slip faulting and coastal landslides. Nature Geoscience (2010) vol. 3 (11) pp. 783-788.


16. Hey et al. Propagating rift model for the V-shaped ridges south of Iceland. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. (2010) vol. 11 (3) pp. Q03011

15. Mix et al. Cenozoic migration of topography in the North American Cordillera. Geology (2011) vol. 39 (1) pp. 87-90.

14. Montgomery and Korup. Preservation of inner gorges through repeated Alpine glaciations. Nature Geoscience (2010) vol. 4 (1) pp. 62-67.
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Fall 2010
13. Dunlap. Nature's diffusion experiment: The cooling-rate cooling-age correlation. Geology (2000)

12. Chappell and White. Two contrasting granite types: 25 years later. Aus. J. of Earth Sc. (2001) vol. 48 pp. 489-499

11. Rey and Müller. Fragmentation of active continental plate margins owing to the buoyancy of the mantle wedge. Nature Geoscience (2010) vol. 3 (4) pp. 257-261.


10. Rosing et al. The rise of continents--An essay on the geologic consequences of photosynthesis. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (2006) vol. 232 (2-4) pp. 99-113

9. Corsetti et al. The biotic response to Neoproterozoic snowball Earth. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (2006) vol. 232 (2-4) pp. 114-130



8. Stern, R.J. Modern-style plate tectonics began in Neoproterozoic time: An alternative interpretation of the Earth’s tectonic history. in GSA Special Paper: When did plate tectonics begin on planet Earth  (2008) vol. 440 pp. 265–280.

7. Beutner and Gerbi. Catastrophic emplacement of the heart mountain block slide, Wyoming and Montana, USA. Geological Society of America Bulletin (2005) vol. 117 (5-6) pp. 724-735.


5. Wise. Continental Margins, Freeboard and the Volumes of Continents and Oceans through time. in The Geology of Continental Margins (1974) pp. 45-58

4. Allmendinger et al. From decades to epochs: Spanning the gap between geodesy and structural geology of active mountain belts. Journal of Structural Geology (2009) vol. 31 (11) pp. 1409-1422.



2. Dietrich and Perron. The search for a topographic signature of life. Nature (2006) vol. 439 (7075) pp. 411-418.

1. Hamilton, W.B., 2003, An alternative earth, GSA Today, vol. 13, n. 11,
p. 4-12. 

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