CF
Member Since 1982
Carol D. Frost
Professor, University of Wyoming
Chair, Kaula Award Committee
Professional Experience
University of Wyoming
Professor
Education
Doctorate
1984
Publications
Nature Versus Nurture: Preservation and Destruction of Archean Cratons
The factors that promote stability of Archean cratons are investigated from a combined geodynamic, geological, and geophysical perspective in order...
September 10, 2021
AGU Abstracts
A tale of two carbonatite-alkaline complexes: Rattlesnake Hills and Black Hills, Wyoming
THE MANY FACES, FLAVORS, FLUIDS, AND FOOTPRINTS OF CARBONATITES AND RELATED MAGMAS II ORAL
volcanology, geochemistry and petrology | 15 december 2023
Carol D. Frost, Susan Swapp, Simone E. Runyon, Ant...
Carbonatite complexes associated with alkaline igneous rocks host many of the worlds largest REE deposits. Two Eocene carbonatite-alkaline systems int...
View Abstract
Nature vs Nurture: A Multidisciplinary Perspective on Craton Survivability
STRUCTURE, TECTONICS, AND EARTHQUAKE HAZARDS OF CRATONS III ORAL
tectonophysics | 13 december 2022
Catherine M. Cooper, Heather Bedle, Carol D. Frost
Once premised as impervious, cratonic lithosphere is increasingly described as being much more susceptible to large-scale deformation than originally ...
View Abstract
Stable but Crumpled: Structural Effects of Neoarchean Collision on the Wyoming Craton
STRUCTURE, TECTONICS, AND EARTHQUAKE HAZARDS OF CRATONS II ORAL
tectonophysics | 13 december 2022
Carol D. Frost, B R. Frost, Fabio Da Prat, Fred Mc...
Geologically, the Wyoming craton is the area in Wyoming and adjacent states that is underlain by rocks of Archean age and bounded by Paleoproterozoic ...
View Abstract
Volunteer Experience
2024 - 2024
Chair
Kaula Award Committee
2020 - 2023
Chair
Publications Committee
2020 - 2023
Committee Chair
Council
Check out all of Carol D. Frost’s AGU Research!
View All Research Now