Maria Seton

Maria Seton
Nationality Australian
Fields Geology
Institutions The University of Sydney
Alma mater The University of Sydney
Notable awards Dorothy Hill Award (2014)

Maria Seton (nee Sdrolias) is an Australian geologist in the Faculty of Science EarthByte Group School of Geosciences at the University of Sydney.[1] Maria's research is in the field of geophysics and geodynamics. Her main focus is the link between plate tectonic and mantle processes. Maria also works on kinematic controls on subduction and back-arc basin formation and the relationship between tectonics and palaeo-climate

Research

Subduction and Back-arc-Basin

Maria has recently updated the palaeo subduction and back-arc basin parameters.[2] This important data was visualised in a new grid map available online.[3] One of the main achievements of this work is the correlation made between the age of the subducting oceanic lithosphere and the intermediate dip of the slab. Related to the subduction survey, back-arc-basins were studied, and their occurrence was correlated to the age of subducting oceanic lithosphere.

SW Pacific and Philippine Sea tectonics

Maria had surveyed the SW Pacific ocean and collected important new bathymetry, gravity and magnetic data from the FAUST2 cruise she had participated in. She published the results concerning the spreading history in the inactive back-arc basins in The Australian Plate GSA Special Volume.[4] Maria examined the rotation history of the Philippine Sea plate as well

Collaborative projects

Maria is involved a collaborative work on the creation of the new agegrid as well as palaeo-agegrids. Another collaborative work she is involved with is the modelling the palaeoenvirnoment and palaeoclimate of the Southern Ocean during the past 40 million years.

Sandy Island enigma

In one of her research cruises through the south pacific, Maria realised that an island charted in Google Earth and scientific maps in fact does not exist. A close investigation exposed a mistake that was made by sailors in the 19th century, only to be discovered in present days by Dr. Seton and colleagues.

Select publications and bibliography

References

  1. Sdrolias and Müller, 2006, Controls on Back-arc Basin Formation, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, Vol. 7, Q04016, doi:10.1029/2005GC001090.
  2. .
  3. [Seton (nee Sdrolias), M., Müller, R., Gaina, C. (2003). Tectonic evolution of the southwest Pacific using constraints from backarc basins. Geological Society of Australia Special Publication, 22, 343–359.].
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