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Undergraduate Thesis Requirement

The Geol 498B senior thesis requirement in Geological Sciences is intended to provide students with a high-quality collaborative research experience under the guidance of a faculty mentor. The Department has a long history – over 40 years - of providing such opportunities for our undergraduate students, many of whom have presented results of their research at professional meetings and/or published results in professional journals. Via this requirement, students get to experience firsthand the process of scholarly research, are better prepared for graduate school, and are better equipped to make career decisions. Graduating seniors make an oral presentation of their research on “thesis defense day” at the end of Spring semester and a faculty committee selects the outstanding thesis.  Love Library houses the collection – which totals many hundreds - of our undergraduate theses.

In order to benefit most from the thesis requirement – you are encouraged to select a faculty mentor and thesis topic as early as possible in your undergraduate training – and in general at least two semesters prior to your expected graduation date. Settling all this by the end of your junior year - prior to summer - is an ideal situation that will allow you plenty of time to do a good job.

If you have a specific thesis topic in mind – this is great!  If not, don’t worry because most students in fact collaborate with faculty to define and develop a research topic.  The listing below indicates the general areas of research expertise and interest of individual faculty members.  Students are responsible for initiating discussion with faculty members about possible thesis work.

FACULTY INTERESTS CONTACT
Camp, Vic
Ph.D., 1976 Washington State University
volcanology, petrology, tectonic control of magmatic systems, geologic mapping in volcanic terrains with an emphasis on the flood basalts and Basin-and-Range volcanic rocks of eastern Oregon
camp1@mail.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-228K
phone: (619) 594-7170
Day, Steve
Ph.D., 1977 UC San Diego
seismology
source dynamics earthquake strong motion explosion seismology
day@moho.sdsu.edu
office: PS-129A
phone: (619) 594-2663
Dorman, Clive
Ph.D., 1974 Oregon State University
physical oceanography
air-sea interaction
marine meteorology
cdorman@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-110
phone: (619) 594-5707
Frost, Eric
Ph.D., 1983 University of Southern California

geologic imaging, seismic reflection profiling, regional tectonics, field and structural geology, structural geology, Immersive Visualization, telecommunications in Earth Science, Central Asia humanitarian relief

frost@imagine.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-120A
phone: (619) 594-5003
Girty, Gary
Ph.D., 1983 Columbia University
processes controlling the compositions of sandstones and argillites, sedimentological and structural origins of Paleozoic/Mesozoic rocks of the western Cordillera
ggirty@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-233A
phone: (619) 594-2552
Hanan, Barry
Ph.D., 1980 Virginia Polytechnic Institute
igneous/metamorphic petrology, isotope geochemistry, tectonics/mantle geodynamics
bhanan@sunstroke.sdsu.edu
office: IA-96
phone: (619) 594-6710
Jiracek, George
Ph.D., 1972 UC Berkeley
electromagnetics, magnetotellurics aimed at exploration and deep continental processes
gjiracek@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-228J
phone: (619) 594-5160
Kimbrough, David
Ph.D., 1982 UC Santa Barbara
geochronology, petrology and tectonics of circum-Pacific orogenic belts, Baja California geology
dkimbrough@geology.sdsu.edu
office: PS-117
phone: (619) 594-1385
Mellors, Rob
Ph.D., 1995 Indiana University
seismology, signal processing, synthetic aperture radar
rmellors@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-228G
phone: (619) 594-3455
Morrow, Jared
Ph.D., 1997, University of Colorado-Boulder
sedimentology, stratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and chemostratigraphy. Devonian to Carboniferous depositional history and sequence stratigraphy, conodont-based event stratigraphic study of the mid-Late Devonian mass extinction interval, and the geologic history of Alamo Impact Event.
jmorrow@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-228A
phone: (619) 594-1395
Peterson, Gary
Ph.D., 1961, University of Washington
stratigraphy, geology of North America, planetary geology
gpeterson@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-228H
phone: (619) 594-5594
Olsen, Kim Bak
Ph.D., 1994 University of Utah 
earthquake dynamics, 3-D Simulation of wave propagation, parallel and high-performance computing, visualization and animation, strong ground motion and site amplification
kbolsen@geology.sdsu.edu
office GMCS 231
phone (619) 594-2649
Pietruszka, Aaron
Ph.D., 1999, University of Hawaii
igneous petrology; trace-element and isotope geochemistry; application of geochemical measurements to studies of active volcanoes; development of new analytical techniques
apietruszka@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-227A
phone: (619) 594-4372
Rockwell, Tom
Ph.D., 1983 UC Santa Barbara
paleoseismology, tectonic geomorphology, neotectonics, soils stratigraphy, earthquake history of major faults in southern and Baja California, Turkey, Israel, India, Nepal and other exotic areas
trockwell@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-223A
phone: (619) 594-4441
Schellenberg, Steven
Ph.D., 2000 University of Southern California
paleobiology and paleoecology of invertebrates and protists, Mesozoic and Cenozoic paleoceanography, applications of isotopic and elemental chemistry to biological, ecological, and environmental research
sschellenberg@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-114
phone: (619) 594-1039
Thorbjarnarson, Kathy
Ph.D., 1990 UCLA
groundwater and surface water interactions in riparian and estuarine wetlands, nutrient loadings by groundwater to surface waters, laboratory and computer simulations of fate and transport of organic contaminants
kthorbjar@geology.sdsu.edu
office: GMCS-228F
phone: (619) 594-1392
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