It is an honor to introduce Peter Ulmer, one of the winners of the
2022 Norman L. Bowen Award of the AGU Volcanology, Geochemistry, and
Petrology section. Peter’s breadth of approaches spans experimental
petrology, field geology, and magma rheology in a truly exceptional way.
Peter started as a field petrologist working on hydrous plutonic rocks
in the Alps. The difficulty in retrieving petrological system variables
in hydrous magmatic systems and understanding the role of water in
magmas inspired his groundbreaking experimental studies ever since.
Peter is widely known for exploiting fundamental questions by innovative
and carefully designed experiments on subduction zone processes and
magma generation and differentiation, with a great eye for big problems.
His experimental demonstration of serpentine stability to mantle depth
shaped research on volatile cycling in subduction zones for the past 25
years. His discovery changed the perception of hydrous arc magmatism and
the subduction zone water cycle and inspired the development of novel
experimental and analytical techniques on determining the composition of
subduction zone fluids and melts around the second critical end point
at high pressure. Peter explored the phase relations of multiply
saturated primary hydrous basaltic magmas and their intermediate to
felsic distillates that form much of the juvenile continental crust. By
simulating both equilibrium and fractional crystallization, Peter showed
that fractional crystallization provides in many cases a much closer
match to natural rocks, most notably for arc lower crust. The full
breadth of these results on transcrustal magmatic systems is yet to be
explored. Moreover, Peter’s work on the rheology of particle and
bubble-bearing magmas experimentally demonstrated the non-Newtonian
behavior of crystal-rich magmas, with implications for the quantitative
modeling of magma conduit processes, including the important effects on
volatile exsolution. In addition, and perhaps even more important, Peter
is a brilliant mentor for Ph.D. students and postdocs, and—rare in
academia—incredibly modest. He is an inspiration for young scientists
and an extraordinary fount of knowledge on all matters experimental. The
diversity, rigor, and creativity in Peter’s experimental research are
an extraordinary match to Bowen’s legacy.
—Othmar Müntener, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerlan
Thank you, Othmar, for the kind citation and for more than 20 years
of intense and fruitful collaboration and friendship. Thanks to those
who supported my nomination and the Volcanology, Geochemistry, and
Petrology Award Committee for selecting me. I am truly honored and
humbled to receive the Bowen Award.
Of course, this is more than honoring an individual but a career
based on interaction and collaboration with numerous mentors, peers, and
students. Volkmar Trommsdorff, Alan Thompson, and Ezio Callegari, all
experts combining field, geochemistry, and petrology, introduced me as a
student at ETH Zurich into the challenging world of petrology. Studying
the Adamello plutonic complex in the Southern Alps, I realized that
unraveling the formation of arc-related rocks requires more than
conducting fieldwork and analyzing rocks. Alan nudged me to study The
Evolution of Igneous Rocks by Bowen, which I did with limited motivation
considering the “ancient” publication date. This, however, completely
changed my view on how to tackle igneous rocks based on profound
knowledge of phase equilibria representing the thermodynamic control on
evolution and composition. Understanding arc petrogenesis requires
fundamental understanding of phase relations in hydrous systems from
magma generation in the mantle to differentiation and emplacement in the
crust. This motivated me to apply for a postdoc at the Geophysical
Laboratory, allowing me to learn the trade of experimental petrology
from the very experts. Bjorn Mysen, Ikuo Kushiro, Neil Irvine, Hatten
Yoder, and Joe Boyd are ultimately responsible for turning a “field guy”
into something like an experimental petrologist, both intellectually
and technically, and deeply influenced the way I perceive igneous
processes. Back at ETH, I had the opportunity to expand the existing
experimental petrology lab together with Max Schmidt and Stefano Poli
constituting the nucleus of what became an established experimental lab.
Thank you for your continuous support and friendship.
The generous support by ETH allowed me to conduct research in the most
unrestricted way and in close collaboration with great colleagues,
postdocs, and motivated students. This included field campaigns to some
of the most amazing places such as the Kohistan arc with Jean-Pierre
Burg, Patagonia with Othmar and Lukas Baumgartner, and the Sierra Nevada
with Tim Grove and Tom Sisson. Keeping a firm grip to the “ground” in
the realm of real rocks is essential to identifying crucial processes
and unresolved questions in Earth sciences and nourishes my fascination
and passion to contribute to resolving the mysteries of continental
crust formation.
—Peter Ulmer, Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland