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COCONet Graduate Fellowships Fellowship Awardees

cocoNetThe COCONet Graduate Fellowships support students undertaking high impact research and graduate-level training in the Earth sciences in the Caribbean region where there is a significant need for more expertise and study to meet immediate concerns and provide longer-term benefits to the COCONet community. The benefits include but are not limited to, educational advancement, professional workforce development, hazards mitigation, development and planning, and understanding and living with Earth processes.

For more information please contact Glen Mattioli, Director of Geodetic Infrastructure at UNAVCO and Principal Investigator for COCONet.

Email: mattioliunavco.org

COCONet is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation in collaboration with many people and partnerships. Please visit coconet.unavco.org for more details.

The Continuously Operating Caribbean GPS Observational Network (COCONet) project funded by the National Science Foundation as a Collaborative Research project between UNAVCO and the University Consortium for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) is pleased to announce four new recipients of the COCONet Graduate Fellowship awards and five second-year recipients for 2014.

Congratulations to the outstanding COCONet Graduate Fellows for 2014 and our second year Fellows. The four new COCONet Fellows for 2014 are:

 

AllenTeddy Allen

a doctoral graduate student in meteorology at the University of Miami. He has a Bachelor’s degree in physical geography from the University of California, Santa Barbara and a Masters degree in geography from East Carolina University. His research is focused on understanding the origins of the bimodal rainfall signal in the Caribbean and the onset of the related mid-summer drought. He is a volunteer for the International Environmental Data Rescue Organization and has led workshops on climate data rescue and analysis in Dominica and Jamaica.

 

EllisAndria Ellis

A doctoral graduate student in geophysics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She has a Bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from the University of the Pacific. Her research is focused on understanding plate deformation using GPS measurements, at the western edge of the Caribbean plate, where the Motagua-Polochic fault system, the Middle America subduction zone and other faults have caused destructive earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. She has had valuable geotechnical internships and was a teacher/mentor for a middle school geoscience experience for girls project.

 

 

LechnerHans Lechner

A doctoral graduate student in geology at Michigan Technological University. He has a Bachelor’s degree in geography from Humboldt State University and a Masters degree in geology from Michigan Technological University. His research is focused on understanding ground deformation at Pacaya Volcano, Guatemala using GPS and other tools. Hans will model the magma reservoir structure using this data to inform volcano dynamics and eruption warnings for public safety. Hans served in the Peace Corps in El Salvador and Jamaica before pursuing an advanced degree.

 

 

WrightVanshan Wright

a graduate student in Geophysics at Southern Methodist University, Dallas. He has a Bachelor’s degree in Geology from Calvin College. In his research, Vanshan uses a combination of GPS data, seismic reflection profiles and gravity cores to understand the neotectonic and paleoseismic history of Jamaica. As a native of Jamaica, Vanshan is familiar with the environment and his work will help prepare residents for future earthquakes in Jamaica.

 

Congratulations to second year Fellows, recipients of the 2013 COCONet Graduate Fellows.

 

DouillyRoby Douilly

A doctoral graduate student in geophysics at Purdue University. Roby is from Haiti. He has a Bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Universite d’Etat d’Haiti and a Masters degree in seismology from Purdue University. His doctoral research is focused on understanding and modeling the rupture process of the Enriquillo and Leogane fault zones in Haiti in order to estimate the distribution and strength of future ground shaking to improve risk resiliency in Haiti and other seismic zones.

 

GeirssonHalldor Geirsson

A doctoral graduate student in geophysics at Pennsylvania State University. Halldor is from Iceland. He has a Bachelor’s degree and a Masters degree in geophysics from the University of Iceland. His doctoral research is focused on understanding the tectonics and deformation related to the subduction of the Cocos plate beneath the Caribbean plate near El Salvador, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. His research will help to assess earthquake hazards (such as the 5 September 2012 magnitude 7.6 Nicoya earthquake) and volcanic hazards (such as the 1999 eruption of Cerro Negro in Nicaragua).

 

GeorgeOphelia George

A doctoral graduate student in geology at the University of South Florida. Ophelia is from the Commonwealth of Dominica, an island nation in the Lesser Antilles region of the Caribbean Sea. She has a Bachelor’s degree in geologic sciences from Florida International University and a Masters degree in geophysics from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Her doctoral research is focused on changes in plate tectonics affecting volcanism in the Lesser Antilles over the past 40 million years in order to generate a new hazards map for the island arc polygenetic volcanic system.

 

SibajaEsteban Josue Chaves Sibaja

A doctoral graduate student in seismology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Esteban is from Costa Rica. He has a Bachelor’s degree in physics from the Universidad Nacional (UNA, Costa Rica) and has worked at the Volcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica (OVSICORI). His doctoral research is focused on understanding the seismic coupling between the Cocos and Caribbean plates in the subduction zone beneath the Nicoya and Osa Peninsulas of Costa Rica. Both regions have the potential for a very large earthquake and tsunami.

 

SymitheSteeve Symithe

A doctoral graduate student in geophysics at Purdue University. Steeve is from Haiti. He has a Bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Universite d’Etat d’Haiti and a Masters degree in geophysics from Purdue University. His doctoral research is focused on understanding the motion between the Caribbean, South American, and North American plates in order to build better kinematic models and improve knowledge of earthquake risks in Hispaniola (Haiti and the Dominican Republic share several dangerous faults that cross national borders) and elsewhere.

For more information: http://coconet.unavco.org/science/coconet-fellowship-awardees.html

 

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