14 post-doc-in-seismic-groung-response-analyses PhD positions at University of Exeter
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
About the Partnership This project is one of a number that are in competition for funding from the NERC Great Western Four+ Doctoral Training Partnership (GW4+ DTP). The GW4+ DTP consists of the Great Western Four alliance of the University of Bath, University of Bristol, Cardiff University and...
-
into rivers to restore natural processes, are increasingly employed to address habitat degradation, biodiversity loss, and flood-risk. This PhD aims to monitor and model the ecological responses of plant and
-
industries. Using existing plans, remote sensing and laser scanning field-surveys, they will build lab-based digital replicas of UK post-extractive underground and overground landscapes. Then they will import
-
to other indicators of unrest, such as seismicity. This PhD project will drive innovation in modelling magma-mush processes and the generated surface deformation and seismicity during unrest episodes
-
About the Project Project details: The behaviour of animals determines their responses to environmental change and ultimately shapes whether populations persist or decline. Tools to record and
-
wetlands. The candidate will analyse satellite observations of wildfires and attribute observed thermokarst changes to fire activity, examining the influence of burn frequency and severity on permafrost
-
to development and climate change. This project will analyse data from innovative motion sensors and a suite of other sensors deployed along the Alaknanda River, a tributary of the Ganges in India, since 2025
-
respiration responds to post-wildfire conditions across Amazonia, and how soil properties mediate this response; (2) how pyrogenic carbon (PyC, charcoal) additions affect soil respiration dynamics in southern
-
, quantitative tools to forecast these responses is essential for effective conservation and management. A compelling and urgent example lies with marine turtles, in which six of seven species are currently listed
-
Methods Wildlife populations have declined dramatically in the past century in response to anthropogenic environmental changes, but appropriate tools to study the magnitude and consequences