Bradley S. Singer
Position title: Vilas Distinguished Professor
Email: bsinger@geology.wisc.edu
Phone: 608-265-8650
Address:
387 Weeks Hall
Google Scholar | Curriculum Vitae (June 2021, PDF)
My research uses high-precision geochronology to resolve fundamental geoscientific problems, mainly in three areas: (1) linking the long-term evolution of volcanoes to current states of activity and unrest, (2) the history of the earth’s magnetic field and geodynamo, and (3) chronostratigraphy and evolution of sedimentary basins. The WiscAr Geochronology Laboratory is sought out by researchers and students both within our Department and from outside of the University of Wisconsin-Madison to address volcanic, igneous, tectonic, and sedimentary processes.
I am leading an international team to explore the impact of ice forcing on arc magma plumbing systems during the next five years. This project will collect new data and develop numerical models of how the rapid loss of the Patagonian Ice Sheet affected the composition and rates of eruptions at 6 volcanoes in the Southern Andes of Chile.
Teaching
- Geoscience 140: Natural Disasters and Hazards
- Geoscience 610: Geochronology, Timescales, & Rates of Geological Processes
- Geoscience 771: Igneous Petrology for graduate students
- Geoscience 370: Introductory Petrology
- Geoscience 875, Graduate Research Seminars on igneous processes
Current students and postdocs
- Jacob Klug (PhD, volcanology, igneous processes)
- Benjamin Bruck (PhD, geochronology, chronostratigraphy)
- Pablo Moreno Jaeger (PhD, geochronology, volcanology)
- Youjuan Li (Post-Doc, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China; geochronology)
Recent PhD grads and where they are now
- Nathan Andersen (Research Geologist, USGS, Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, WA)
- Allen Schaen (Assistant Research Scientist, University of Arizona, Reiners Lab)