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Contact:
Michelle J. Markley
Clapp Laboratory, Room 325
413-538-2814

Education:

  • University of Minnesota, Ph.D.
  • Oberlin College, B.A.

Joined MHC: 1998

"Women here are very good at asking questions and getting the answers they want. I'd met MHC students before I came here, and this job was my first choice because I thought the students were great and that it would be a great place for both teaching and research."

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Home > Academics > Faculty > Faculty Profiles > Michelle J. Markley

Michelle J. Markley

Associate Professor of Geology

Specialization: The granites of the Coastal Maine Magmatic Province; active tectonics of South Island, New Zealand; structural geology and tectonics

Mitchelle MarkleyStructural geologist Michelle Markley likes to study mountains, specifically how they were formed. "I study how rocks get 'mushed,' " she says. "I look at rock deformation, at their folds and faults and how they get their texture, or fabric." Her classes make full use of the region around Mount Holyoke, going out to see rock formations at the Quabbin Reservoir, on Skinner Mountain, and in Whately and Cummington. "This is a good area for field work at all levels," says Markley.

During graduate school, Markley studied the tectonic evolution of the western Swiss Alps. She also earned a Fulbright Scholarship to study geology in New Zealand. Currently her primary research focus is the Appalachian mountain belt. It arose from the collision of the North American and African continents, she explains, and is of great interest to geologists who map patterns of rocks in the field.

With a colleague at Franklin and Marshall College, Markley has received funding from the National Science Foundation for a three-year project to study two plutons (magma that solidifies underground) in coastal Maine, on Mount Desert and Vinalhaven Islands.

Markley teaches Physical Geology, Structural Geology and Orogenesis, Plate Tectonics, and a seminar in Appalachian Geology and has published numerous scholarly articles.

News Links:

"New Faculty: Geology Prof. Studies 'How Rocks Get Mushed'," College Street Journal, October 30, 1998

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This page maintained by the Office of Communications. Last modified on January 25, 2006.