Faculty
Geologist Meghan Miller works with scientists worldwide to study why curving mountain chains form where some tectonic plates collide. Their research appears online in Nature.
Geologist Meghan Miller works with scientists worldwide to study why curving mountain chains form where some tectonic plates collide. Their research appears online in Nature.
The Atlas Mountains in Morocco are buoyed up by superhot rock, a USC Dornsife study recently published in Geology finds.
A study by Meghan Miller and Thorsten Becker of earth sciences in USC Dornsife published in Nature Geoscience shows how constantly moving continental plates reshape Earth’s surface.
USC Dornsife assistant professor Meghan Miller’s important discovery beneath the Earth’s surface has been published today in Nature.