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LESLIE D. MCFADDEN

Ph.D., University of Arizona, 1982. (Professor) (505) 277-6121 Office: Northrop 216. Email:lmcfadnm@unm.edu

Summary of Research Interests:

Research emphasis on soil-geomorphic, soil-stratigraphic and soil-forming processes in arid and semi-arid regions. Applications of soil-based research to problems in Quaternary studies and geomorphology, including landscape evolution and paleoclimate, numerical modeling studies of calcic soils, and analyses of seismic, volcanic and flood hazards. Current research also includes biogeomorphic studies and evaluation of impacts of late Quaternary climatic changes on landscapes of the southern Colorado Plateau.

Selected Recent Research Highlights

My colleagues, graduate students and I have been conducting a significant amount of research in an area on the Colorado Plateau in NE Arizona concerning the influences of Holocene climate change and grazing on the landscapes of this region (see McFadden and McAuliffe, 1997, Geomorphology; McAuliffe, Scuderi and McFadden, 2006, Global and Planetary Change), eolian processes, rates and processes of soil formation and rock weathering, and timing and impacts of draughts, and landscape ecology. The photograph in the Department's Climate and Surface Processes web page shows some of the unusual bedrock forms found on slopes in this area, features we are dating using cosmogenic surface age dating techniques (with Dr. John Gosse, Dalhousie University) to derive millennial scale erosion rates. Using a variety of dendrologic, dendroclimatic and dendrogeomorphic techniques (with Dr. Joe McAuliffe, Phoenix Desert Botanical Garden) we are looking at decadal and century scale erosion rates over the past few centuries (see 2005 Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, V. 37(7), p. 232).

My recent graduate student, Dr. Martha (Missy) Eppes, Dr. Alan Gillespie (University of Washington) and I have been conducting studies concerning the influence of the sun and the solar path on physical weathering of rocks in dryland regions (see McFadden et al., 2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin). Many surface rocks in the deserts of the Southwest exhibit vertical linear cracks that appear to represent the critical, first stage of weathering of these rocks into much smaller particles (see accompanying photos). Our studies suggest that differential thermal heating on a daily basis is the key to generating stresses that ultimately cause these fractures. This is most strongly demonstrated by the orientations of a statistically large number of these fractures that have a markedly north-south orientation, which we hypothesize reflects the sun induced east-west extension (see figure). The formation of these cracks appears to be a significant step that enhances the impacts of salt weathering and other types of weathering, that, in favorable circumstances, leads to the formation of angular, well sorted pavements.

Dr. Martha Eppes and I studied soils on alluvial fan and terrace deposits along the northern flank of the San Bernardino Mountains. One of the results of these studies showed that the type of soils that form on these surfaces is strongly influenced by deposit composition, and that with time, the varying rates and types of soil-forming processes has an increasing larger effect on the evolution of tectonic landforms (blind thrust-fault cored folds) observed in this region (see Fig. 4 in Eppes et al., 2002, Geology).

Class Information Links:

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Listing of Recent Publications:

Current, Recent and New Graduate Students

Ann Tillery (M.S., 2003, Co-Adivisor, Dr. Peter Fawecett) Thesis (2 papers):

Nicole Bailey (M.S., 2004): Influence of flooding, sediment, and vegetation, on soil development in the Middle Rio Grande floodplain, New Mexico

Tim Gere (M.S., 2005) Geomorphic investigations of two low-order tributary basins of the Rio Cebolla, western Jemez Mountains, northern New Mexico,

Carolyn Domrose (M.S. in progress)

Devin Gaugler (M.S. in progress)

Martha Eppes (Ph.D., 2002): Soil Geomorphology of the North Flank of the San Bernardino Mountains, California." (current address: Department of Geology and Geography, University of North Carolina, Charlotte)

Angela McLain (Ph.D., in progress)

Debbie Bryan (Ph.D., in progress)


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