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The Best Postgraduate Poster
A well designed poster is an efficient medium for communicating research results. It gives the reader the chance to dwell on aspects of interest and the opportunity to directly question the researcher on them.
2012 Prizewinner
Emma Michie (University of Aberdeen) Architecture of Fault Zones in Carbonates
Past Recipients
2011 Rochelle Taylor (University of Manchester) Velocity structure of the Carboneras fault zone, S.E. Spain
2010 Monika Muller (University of Vienna) Examining the low-angle normal fault system of north-west Kea based on a new geological map
2009 Linda Austin (Keele University) The influence of igneous intrusions on regional post-emplacement structural and geodynamic evolution: Insights from numerical modelling of the North Pennines Batholith, northern England
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Richard Walker (Durham University) Structural precursors to continental break-up; the Faroe Islands, NE Atlantic Margin
2008 Heijn van Gent (RWTH Aachen) The compaction dependent cohesion and tensile strength of gypsum powder - the effect on scaled analogue models
2007 Louise Rogers (University of Leeds) A small look at a big boundary: the Macquarie Island ridge-transform fault
2006 Rebecca Bell (University of Southampton)
2005 Mark Pearce (University of Leeds) Transtension between non-parallel zone boundaries
2004 Rob Worthington (Fault Analysis Group, University College Dublin) Carboniferous normal faulting in the Caledonides of the West of Ireland: a neglected phenomenon?
2003 Dave Healy (University of Liverpool) An inverse method to derive fault slip and geometry from seismically observed vertical stratigraphic displacement using elastic dislocation theory
1997 Robert Smallshire (University of Leeds) Rolling hinges as a mechanism for buckle fold growth: Evidence from the Haut Giffre, French Alps
1988 Sara Bower (University of Leeds)
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