葫芦影

Wellner Selected as a 2016 AAPG Distinguished Lecturer

Wellner Selected as a 2016 AAPG Distinguished Lecturer
Lecturers Represent Geology鈥檚 All Stars

Julia Wellner, assistant professor in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the 葫芦影业, was named a 2016 American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) Distinguished Lecturer.

鈥⊿he is one of 10 people selected for the honor.

Wellner
Wellner works to bring a sediment core onto the deck of the icebreaker; Weddell Sea, Antarctica.
The AAPG-AAPG Foundation Distinguished Lecture Program is the organization鈥檚 flagship initiative for sharing the latest in scientific thought, concepts and advances. The program offers outstanding lectures by speakers who are respected scientific leaders in their disciplines of petroleum geology. The lectures, which are hosted by more than 500 AAPG-affiliated geological societies or university departments around the world, are open to all.

鈥淚 am honored to have this opportunity. It allows me to visit schools around the country and interact with faculty and students working on a range of projects,鈥 said Wellner, who joined the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics faculty in 2006. 鈥淭his program will not only give me a chance to show the research we are doing at UH, but it will also allow me to meet students looking for their next academic program.鈥

Lecturers are selected through a two-step nomination process; there is no application. The speakers are selected by the Distinguished Lecture Committee composed of past distinguished lecturers and other experts. The committee compiles a list of potential speakers and holds a vote; committee membership is never made public.

Wellner鈥檚 Lecture Topics

  • 鈥淎ntarctica鈥檚 Sedimentary Archives of Past Glacial History: Tools for Understanding Climate Change鈥
  • 鈥淎ntarctic Geologic Drilling Programs: Field Work in Extreme Environments and Preparing for the Next Drill Site鈥
  • 鈥淢arine Geological Record of Ice Retreat in the Antarctic Peninsula since the Last Glacial Maximum鈥

Wellner and her students study the sediment deposited underneath and adjacent to ice sheets in the Antarctic, looking at the characteristics of the sediments as a way to determine ice behavior. She also works on sediments in Galveston Bay and the Gulf of Mexico.

鈥淢y studies about glacial history and how ice sheets respond to a changing climate provide information about Earth鈥檚 climate history, which is of interest to AAPG members involved in producing petroleum,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ur department also has an expanding program for surveying in shallow water, and I am excited to share a bit of information about our new survey capabilities.鈥

For her lecture, Wellner developed three presentations: one for general audiences that covers climate change, one about technology, and another about sedimentary transport and glacial systems.

The technology topic is of interest in petroleum exploration because Wellner works in high latitudes, and while she doesn鈥檛 drill for oil, some of the techniques are analogous to what could be used as the Arctic opens up for exploration.

鈥淲hile my emphasis is climate history, my students and I use the same tools, methods and proxies as geologists looking for oil,鈥 Wellner said. 鈥淭his training prepares my students for future careers in the oil industry. They have the right skillset for petroleum exploration as well as an appreciation for climate dynamics.鈥

Wellner will be giving her lectures across the nation, Jan. 25-Feb. 5 and March 7-18.

- Kathy Major, College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics

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