Geology Ph.D. Graduate Yu-Huan Hsieh Receives Dan E. Wells Outstanding Dissertation Award

Award Recognizes Significance and Impact of Research

Each semester, the Dan E. Wells Outstanding Dissertation Award is presented to a doctoral student who has performed outstanding research and submitted the best dissertation to the College. The Summer/Fall 2024 recipient was Yu-Huan Hsieh, a geology Ph.D. graduate.

Yu-Huan Hsieh
Dan E. Wells Outstanding Dissertation Award winner Yu-Huan Hsieh with Dean Dan Wells (left) and her advisor John Suppe (right).

The award was announced on December 14 at the University of Houston Commencement for the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. Hsieh received a certificate and an award of $1,000.

Hsieh’s dissertation is titled “From the Foreland and Retroarc Thrust Belts to the Mantle Transition Zone: First Multi-scale Retrodeformable Transect of the Active 90 mm/year Taiwan Arc-Continent Collision.”

Her research, conducted under the supervision of John Suppe, distinguished professor in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, culminated in a deep and detailed description of the Earth’s crust around and under the island of Taiwan. This mapping disclosed new information for faults in that area, explained a discontinuity in volcanism, and disclosed new dome-shaped magma intrusions.

The increased detail disclosed in this dissertation creates a deeper understanding of subduction in plate tectonics that will aid in future geological research.

She will continue her research as a postdoctoral fellow at UH, working with Suppe.

For the award, nominated dissertations are evaluated for the:

  • Significance and impact of the research
  • Originality of the work
  • Quality of the scholarship, and
  • Quality of the presentation and organization of the dissertation

- Kathy Major, College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics