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Stephen Marshak

Profile picture for Stephen Marshak

Contact Information

3044 Natural History Building

Professor Emeritus

Biography

Prof. Marshak was on the faculty in the Department of Geology for 35 years, and became emeritus in 2018.  He served as Department Head of Geology for 8 years, and then as Director of the School of Earth, Society, and Environment for 10 years.  In addition to research in structural geology and tectonics, he maintains a strong interest in geoscience education. He authors or co-authorrs college textbooks in introductory geology, Earth Science, and structural geology, most of which are published by W.W. Norton & Company. He also has developed a MOOC (massive open online course) offered through Coursera.

Textbooks: http://books.wwnorton.com/books/Author.aspx?id=11563

Coursera: https://www.coursera.org/learn/planet-earth

Research Interests

Prof. Marshak's research involves structural geology, tectonics, and field geology. He has been involved in research projects in the Midcontinent, the Appalachians, and southeastern Brazil, and studies a variety of issues including: the development of tectonic structures and unconformities in cratons; the development of tectonic foliations in rocks; the formation of fold-thrust belts; and crustal evolution during the Precambrian.

Education

  • Ph.D. Columbia University (1983)
  • M.S. University of Arizona (1979)
  • A.B. Cornell University (1976)

Awards and Honors

College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Teaching Award 

University of Illinois Campus Undergraduate Teaching Award

Luckman award for Distinguished Undergraduate Teaching

Amoco Award for Innovation in Teaching

Neil Miner Award of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers

Stillwell Medal of the Australian Geological Society

Courses Taught

  • GEOL 100: Planet Earth
  • GEOL 411: Structural Geology and Tectonics
  • GEOL 415/GEOL 515: Field Geology
  • GEOL 512: Geotectonics
  • ESE 199: Future of Earth's Resources
  • GEOL 511: Advanced Structural Geology

Additional Campus Affiliations

Director Emeritus, School of Earth, Society, and Environment
Professor Emeritus, Earth Science and Environmental Change

Recent Publications

Marshak, S., Wilkerson, M. S., & Defrates, J. (2024). Kinematic and tectonic implications of crenulation cleavage, kink bands, and mesoscopic folds in the Baraboo Syncline, Wisconsin (∼1.45 Ga Picuris Orogen). Journal of Structural Geology, 178, Article 105007. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2023.105007

Murphy, B. S., DeLucia, M. S., Marshak, S., Ravat, D., & Bedrosian, P. A. (2024). Magnetotelluric insights into the formation and reactivation of trans-crustal shear zones in Precambrian basement of the eastern U.S. Midcontinent. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 136(7-8), 2661-2675. https://doi.org/10.1130/B37099.1

Anders, A. M., Lai, J., & Marshak, S. (2022). Development of Foreland Intracratonic Plateaus (Ozark Plateau and Appalachian Plateaus): A Consequence of Topographic Inversion Due To Erosion of Adjacent Fold-Thrust Belts. Tectonics, 41(4), Article e2021TC006957. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021TC006957

Lundstrom, C. C., Lin, X., Brueckel, K., Campe, C., Nan, X., Ortega, K., Akrie, P., Yu, M., & Marshak, S. (2022). New mechanism for forming thick granitic continental crust at Phanerozoic convergent margins. In G. R. Foulger, L. C. Hamilton, D. M. Jurdy, C. A. Stein, K. A. Howard, & S. Stein (Eds.), Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (pp. 233-249). (Special Paper of the Geological Society of America; Vol. 553). Geological Society of America. https://doi.org/10.1130/2021.2553(20)

Marshak, S., Rauber, R. M., & Johnson, N. (2022). Natural Disasters. W. W. Norton & Company.

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