Geology and Geophysics
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Mohammad Nooraiepour at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Rock Properties and Sealing Efficiency in Fine-grained Siliciclastic Caprocks - Implications for CSS and Petroleum Industry
Honoré Dzekamelive Yenwongfai at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Quantitative seismic reservoir characterization - A Seismic Petrophysical Study in the Goliat Field, SW Barents Sea
Mohsen Kalani at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Multiscale seal characterization in the North Sea - implications from clay sedimentology, well logs interpretation and seismic analyses
Viktoria Baranyi at the Department of Geosciences will be defending her dissertation: Vegetation dynamics during the Late Triassic (Carnian-Norian): Response to climate and environmental changes inferred from palynology
Beyene Girma Haile at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Reservoir quality of the Upper Triassic to Lower Jurassic sediments, NW Barents Shelf: understanding porosity evolution through diagenesis and sedimentology
Irfan Baig at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Burial and thermal histories of sediments in the southwestern Barents Sea and North Sea areas: evidence from integrated compaction, thermal maturity and seismic stratigraphic analyses
Pierre Turquais at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Dictionary Learning and Sparse Representations for Denoising and Reconstruction of Marine Seismic Data
Mark Mulrooney at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Faults affecting the Triassic Barents Shelf: Syn-kinematic deposition, deformation mechanisms and driving forces
Zagros Matapour at the Department of Geosciences will be defending his dissertation: Dynamic Traps in the Barents Sea – How oil from different geological periods came to be emplaced in commercial structures