Dr. Jeremy Deans
Associate Professor
Bio
Dr. Jeremy Deans' research is focused on the formation and deformation of the lithosphere. Dr. Deans' research has mainly focused on the lower oceanic lithosphere in fast-spreading ridges, slow-spreading ridges, and ophiolites and in oceanic and continental arcs. The lower lithosphere is a zone of intrusion, cooling, and deformation. Dr. Deans' uses techniques ranging from microstructural analysis to petrophysical tools and bulk rock and mineral compositional variation.
Dr. Jeremy Deans attended Tompkins Cortland Community College in Dryden, NY with a concentration in Math and Science before getting his bachelors degree from Cornell University in Ithaca, NY with a emphasis in Geology. Dr. Deans then attended Texas Tech University in Lubbock, TX working on the compositional variation in a granitic body in Nevada. Dr. Deans continued at Texas Tech University for his Ph.D. with an emphasis on the formation and deformation of the lower oceanic lithosphere.
- Structural Geology, Petrology (PHD) - Texas Tech University (2016)
- Igneous Petrology, Geochemistry (MS) - Texas Tech University (2010)
- Geology (BS) - Cornell University (2007)
Undergraduate:
GLY 101, Physical Geology
GLY 101L, Physical Geology Lab Coordinator
GLY 301, Mineralogy
GLY 304, Petrology
GLY 308, Structural Geology
GLY 403, Optical Mineralogy
GLY 410, Elements of Geochemistry
GLY 480, Field Geology
Graduate:
GLY 503, Optical Mineralogy
GLY 510, Elements of Geochemistry
GLY 604, Tectonics
GLY 680, Advanced Field Mapping
GLY 689, Seminar
- Magma reservoir formation and evolution at a slow-spreading center (Atlantis Bank, Southwest Indian Ridge), Frontiers in Earth Science: Petrology, 2020,
- Dynamic Accretion Beneath a Slow‐Spreading Ridge Segment: IODP Hole 1473A and the Atlantis Bank Oceanic Core Complex, Journal of Geophysical Research, 2019,
- Geographically re-oriented magmatic and metamorphic foliations from ODP Hole 735B Atlantis Bank, Southwest Indian Ridge: Magmatic intrusion and crystal-plastic overprint in the footwall of an oceanic core complex, Journal of Structural Geology, 2019,