Ayla Pamukçu in Iceland
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Ayla Pamukçu in Iceland
Earth and Planetary Sciences
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Ayla Pamukçu joined the Stanford faculty in 2019. She conducts research involving observations and data spanning a range of scales and perspectives, from geology in the field to observations of microscopic crystals in the lab. She loves bringing this multifaceted information together to unlock the history of volcanoes. After graduating from the University of Chicago, studied geophysical sciences and Near Eastern languages and civilizations as an undergraduate, Professor Pamukçu spent a year in Turkey as a Fulbright Scholar exploring geoarchaeology. She then went on to receive her masters and doctoral degrees at Vanderbilt University, where she studied the conditions and lives of magmas that produce enormous supereruptions. She then held several postdoc positions (Brown, Princeton, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), during which she expanded her research.
On this program, Professor Pamukçu will discuss the unique tectonic environment of Iceland; magmatism and volcanism in Iceland; and glaciers and the glacial history of Iceland.
Assistant Professor, Earth and Planetary Sciences
Assistant Professor (by courtesy), Geophysics
Numerous honors and awards, including the Curriculum Transformation Fellow (2023–2025) and the Gabilan Faculty Fellow (2021–2023)
PhD, Vanderbilt University, Environmental Engineering (Earth and Environmental Sciences option) (2014)
MS, Vanderbilt University, Earth and Environmental Sciences (2010)
BS, University of Chicago, Geophysical Sciences (2006)
Minor, University of Chicago, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations (2006)
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