Mary C. Hill
Quick Facts
Biography
Mary Catherine Hill is an American hydrologist, the winner of the Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize and of the Dooge Medal of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences, and a Darcy Lecturer for the National Ground Water Association. After working for many years at the United States Geological Survey, she became a professor of geology at the University of Kansas.
Education and career
Hill received her B.S. from Hope College, and received her masters and doctorate in civil engineering, specializing in water resources, at Princeton University in 1985. Her dissertation was An investigation of hydraulic conductivity estimation in a ground-water flow study of Northern Long Valley, New Jersey.
She worked for many years at the United States Geological Survey (USGS) before joining the geology department at the University of Kansas as a professor in 2014.
Contributions
Much of Hill's research at the USGS concerned groundwater modeling, simulation of groundwater, and evaluation of the accuracy of groundwater simulations. At the USGS, she was one of the main developers of the MODFLOW groundwater flow simulation code. More recently, she has also studied the modeling and simulation of rainwater runoff.
At the University of Kansas, she established the Mary C. Hill Research Fund for Women in the Sciences to help support female junior faculty in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
With Claire R. Tiedeman, Hill is the author of the book Effective Groundwater Model Calibration: With Analysis of Data, Sensitivities, Predictions, and Uncertainty (John Wiley & Sons, 2007).
Recognition
Hill won the Walter L. Huber Civil Engineering Research Prize in 2000, and was Darcy Lecturer for the National Ground Water Association in 2001. In 2005, the National Ground Water Association gave her their M. King Hubbert Award. In 2015, the International Association of Hydrological Sciences awarded her the Dooge Medal.
Hill is past president of the International Commission for Ground Water. She has been a Fellow of the Geological Society of America since 2003, and was also elected as a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union "for development of innovative methods for parameter estimation and sensitivity analysis in hydrologic modeling".