Circular dichroism was used to monitor the thermal unfolding of ribonuclease A in 50% aqueous methanol. The spectrum of the protein at temperatures below -10-degrees-C (pH* 3.0) was essentially identical to that of native ribonuclease A in aqueous solution. The spectrum of the thermally denatured material above 70-degrees-C revealed some residual secondary structure in comparison to protein unfolded by 5 M Gdn . HCl at 70-degrees-C in the presence or absence of methanol. The spectra as a function of temperature were deconvoluted to determine the contributions of different types of secondary structure. The position of the thermal unfolding transition as monitored by alpha-helix, with a midpoint at 38-degrees-C, was at a much higher temperature than that monitored by beta-sheet, 26-degrees-C, which also corresponded to that observed by DELTA-A286, tyrosine fluorescence and hydrodynamic radius (from light scattering measurements). Thus, the loss of beta-sheet structure is decoupled from that of alpha-helix, suggesting a step-wise unfolding of the protein. The transition observed for loss of alpha-helix coincides with the previously measured transition for His-12 by NMR from a partially folded state to the unfolded state, suggesting that the unfolding of the N-terminal helix in RNase A is lost after unfolding of the core beta-sheet during thermal denaturation. The thermally denatured protein was relatively compact, as measured by dynamic light scattering.