Alley Family Graduate Scholarship: Elisabeth Clyne, Emily Schwans
Cannon Family Graduate Symposium Award in Geosciences: Benjamin Barnes, Jacob Cipar, Joanmarie Del Vecchio, Troy Ferland, Allison Fox, Gabriella Harris, Xiaoni Hu, Kalle Jahn, Heather Jones, Allison Karp, Abby Kenigsberg, Rebecca Payne, Matthew Reinhold, Claire Webster, Timothy Witham, Gregory Wong, Clay Wood, Damaris Wyatt
Chevron Scholarship: Julia Carr, Guangchi Xing
Charles E. Knopf, Sr., Memorial Scholarship: Tsai-Wei Chen, Jacob Cipar, Julia LaFond, Collin Oborn, Mary Reinthal, Claire Webster
The Michael Loudin Family Graduate Scholarship in Geosciences: Benjamin Barnes, Mary Reinthal
Krynine Memorial Award: Benjamin Barnes, David Bolton, Cathleen Bressers, Claire Cleveland, Elisabeth Clyne, Joanmarie Del
Vecchio, Troy Ferland, Gabriella Harris, Benjamin Hayworth, Kalle Jahn, Heather Jones, Allison Karp, Erica Lucas, Sierra Melton,
Peter Miller, Mary Reinthal, Adriana Rizzo, Emily Schwans, Judith Sclafani, Andrew Shaughnessy, Srisharan Shreedharan, Elena Stiles,
Claire Webster, Clay Wood
Hiroshi and Koya Ohmoto Graduate Fellowship: Si Chen, Andrew Shaughnessy
Richard R. Parizek Graduate Fellowship: Jacon Cipar, Clarissa Crist, Joanmarie Del Vecchio, Kalle Jahn, Lisa Ma
Scholten-Williams-Wright Scholarship in Field Geology: Jacob Cipar, Xiaoni Hu, Collin Oborn
Shell Geoscience Energy Research Facilitation Award: David Bolton, Julia Carr, Arnold Eatmon, Troy Ferland, Allison Fox, Xiaoni Hu, Peter Miller, Dorivaldo Santos, Srisharan Shreedharan, Clay Wood
Richard Standish Good Graduate Scholarship: Troy Ferland, Allison Karp
Donald B. and Mary E. Tait Scholarship in Microbial Biogeochemistry: Julia LaFond, Claire Webster
Barry Voight Endowment: Machel Higgins, Collin Oborn


Energetic barely begins to describe geosciences alumna Ashlee Dere.
Randy Cygan is a Centennial Fellow of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences and he served as a member of the department’s advisory board from 2012 to 2019. He has been a valued alumni mentor to our undergraduate students seeking career guidance. Cygan received his bachelor’s degree in chemistry with a minor in geology in 1977 from the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). He first caught the geology bug during his high school years by traveling with family and friends throughout the Midwest, but it grew into a serious avocation during a lab assistantship with Gus Koster van Groos at UIC. Cygan’s exposure to the high-pressure synthesis of minerals led him to graduate studies at the world’s center for experimental petrology. At Penn State he earned his master’s degree in 1980 followed by a doctorate in 1983, both in geochemistry and mineralogy.
My path into geoscience was fairly unintentional. Through high school extracurricular activities, I was introduced to topics such as hydrogeology, seismology, paleontology, and glaciology. Although I was intrigued by these studies, I never gave them much consideration for my future—until it came time to apply to college. Scrolling through the endless list of possible majors, there were quite a few that caught my eye. None stuck out quite like the geosciences. I decided to give the geosciences major a try, and after my first year it was clear to me that this was the right major for me.
My earliest memory of geology is looking through my father’s telescope at the full moon on a crisp autumn night. The town we lived in at the time had little light pollution, and it afforded a wonderfully unobscured view of the night sky. Stepping on my tiptoes to gaze through the eyepiece, transported a world many thousands of miles away to directly in front of me. I observed the deep gouges and craters carved on the lunar surface from innumerable debris impacts. Canyons snaked across the moon in seemingly random patterns. Ancient mountains stood as lonely sentinels guarding the secrets of their formation from all but the most curious eyes. After that night, my imagination was piqued, and I would do anything in my power to find out more about the world around me through science.
Having been born and raised in a volcanic archipelago, the Canary Islands, I have always been fascinated by the geological processes that operate on Earth, the mechanisms that drive them, and their impacts on society. I further developed my passion for volcano geophysics during a visit to Iceland when I was 16, where I had the chance to meet a Ph.D. student who was using GPS data for volcano monitoring. Ever since, I have been drawn to research involving the study of volcanic hazards through geophysical methods.