Jobs:Job-00711
Start reviewing process: 1 August 2022
Posting:
Position: 4 Postdoctoral Opportunities
Start reviewing process: 1 August 2022
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Opportunity 1. Interactions of humans and geomorphic processes
We seek an individual with a recent PhD in geomorphology or a related field and strong interest in exploring how humans influence geomorphic processes. This individual will join a team of researchers at Boston College studying the response of rivers to land-use and climate changes, led by Noah Snyder. The specific project(s) will depend on areas of mutual interest. Possibilities include, but are not limited to: (1) developing high-resolution records of watershed disturbances from lake and reservoir sediments; (2) quantifying the timescale of legacy sediment persistence in river valleys; and (3) modeling the upstream and downstream effects of dams and dam removal. This position is funded for 1.5 years.
Opportunity 2. Geodynamic modeling
We seek an individual with a recent PhD in geodynamics or related field with a strong quantitative background in one or more of the following areas: geophysical modeling, thermodynamics, rock mechanics, petrologic modeling, or cryospheric processes. This individual will join a team of researchers at Boston College studying active deformation in marine, terrestrial, and glacial environments, led by Mark Behn. The specific project(s) will depend on areas of mutual interest. Possibilities include, but are not limited to: (1) deformation and differentiation of lower continental crust; (2) geodynamic modeling of mid-ocean ridges and transform faults; (3) interactions between surficial and lithospheric processes; and (4) feedbacks between subglacial hydrology and ice sheet dynamics. This position is funded for 1.5 years.
Opportunity 3. Coastal processes modeling
We seek an individual with a recent PhD and strong background in quantitative geomorphology, sediment transport, coastal processes, geodynamics, math and physics, and/or computer modeling. This individual will join a team of researchers at Boston College studying sediment erosion, transport, and deposition in rivers, reservoirs and coasts led by Mark Behn and Noah Snyder. The postdoctoral position will involve the formulation, development, and analysis of numerical models to explore how climate and land-use change over the next decades to centuries will influence hydro-eco-geomorphic processes in estuaries, salt marshes, reservoirs and adjacent environments. Experience with Delft3D or similar models is desirable. This position is funded for 1.5 years.
Opportunity 4. LA-ICPMS Geochemistry