The Department of Earth Sciences is looking for a highly motivated PhD candidate with an MSc background in Earth Sciences, Oceanography, Climate Sciences or other appropriate fields. You will work on the project
‘Ocean Alkalinity Dynamics’.
Your jobOcean alkalinity plays a major role in ocean’s carbon uptake, in buffering, and in calcium carbonate production and dissolution, and it impacts and is affected by various biogeochemical processes. The processes governing ocean alkalinity act over multiple timescales (from instantaneous chemical equilibration to hundred thousand of years) and involve physical, chemical and biological processes. Alkalinity dynamics is poorly understood and represented in present-day generation of earth system models.
In this four-year study under guidance of Profs.
Jack Middelburg and
Henk Dijkstra, you will elucidate ocean alkalinity dynamics and develop new and improve existing models for ocean carbon cycling. The initial focus is on the alkalinity generation and consumption processes at the annual to decadal timescale and their importance for future ocean carbon update, but we invite you to share your ideas and suggestions for this innovative project in your motivation letter.
This project is part of the 10-year
EMBRACER research programme funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). At EMBRACER, we work at the very frontiers of knowledge on climate change, Earth’s climate system and climate feedbacks. The programme brings together a wide range of world-leading climate experts with the aim to address existing uncertainties about climate feedbacks at the boundaries between oceans, land, ice, and atmosphere. Our interdisciplinary approach and state-of-the-art infrastructure will bring us forward in our understanding of the impact of climate feedbacks emerging over the next decades to centuries.
A personalised training programme will be set up, reflecting your training needs and career objectives. About 20% of your time will be dedicated to this training component, which includes following courses/workshops as well as training on the job in assisting in the Bachelor’s and Master’s programmes of the department at Utrecht University.