Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Palaeoenvironmental Research 2019. Germany

Publish Date: Sep 30, 2019

Deadline: Oct 31, 2019

Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Palaeoenvironmental Research

The "PANTROPOCENE: Finding a Pre-industrial Anthropocene Project" at the Department of Archaeology, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History (MPI-SHH), Jena, Germany is pleased to announce a new vacancy for a Research Fellowship position in palaeoenvironmental survey, coring, and analysis and its capacity to reconstruct past human land-use and environmental impacts. The position will be for a period of up to 3 years and based in Jena, Germany.

The PANTROPOCENE project is newly funded by the prestigious European Research Council and will run for the duration of the postdoctoral position.

Headed by Dr. Patrick Roberts, PANTROPOCENE seeks to determine how pre-colonial and colonial human land-use changed within the Philippine Archipelago, what its impacts were on tropical vegetation, and how it has left legacies for 21st century populations in the region. Its broader aim is to determine whether land-use in the tropical portions of the former Spanish Empire was enough to initiate pre-industrial earth systems feedbacks.

Candidate tasks

The successful candidate will play a central role in the project and its outputs. They will be expected to undertake and coordinate palaeoenvironmental survey and fieldwork in at least three regions of the Philippine Archipelago. The candidate will obtain palaeoenvironmental cores and samples from lake and swamp settings and exposed natural profiles. They will then coordinate their analyses for dating, various palaeoenvironmental reconstruction methodologies, and proxies of human presence in order to produce synthetic datasets of human-environment interactions on pre- and post-colonial time periods.

The candidate will work in a leading global centre for archaeology, the Department of Archaeology at the MPI-SHH, renowned for combining archaeological, anthropological, geochemical, and palaeoenvironmental expertise in field and laboratory methodologies. They will also work closely with key project partners Dr. Grace Baretto-Tesoro (University of the Philippines), Dr. Janelle Stevenson and Prof. Simon Haberle (The Australian National University, Canberra), and Prof. Achim Brauer (GFZ, Potsdam), among others. They will also be expected to support PhD students within the project at the Department more widely.

Candidate qualifications

The ideal applicant will have a strong background in Geology, Geography, Environmental Archaeology, or a strong track record of palaeoenvironmental fieldwork and reconstruction particularly for the Holocene. In depth, practical knowledge of coring methodologies and fieldwork coordination are essential, as well as an interest in a diversity of palaeoenvironmental proxy methodologies. Other prerequisites include evidence of strong oral and written communication skills, including an outstanding publication record, commensurate with career stage. Willingness to work as part of a team, travel to field sites in the Philippine Archipelago for extended periods of time (c. 4-6 weeks), and the ability to complete tasks in a timely and structured fashion are also necessities.

Essential:

  • PhD in Geography, Geology, Environmental Archaeology, Archaeological Science, or Earth Sciences, or a similar discipline.
  • Hands on, practical experience with palaeoenvironmental survey and fieldwork, with a focus on the coring of lake and swamp basins.
  • Practical and theoretical experience with a variety of palaeoenvironmental reconstruction methods and chronometric approaches to the dating of palaeoenvironmental records.
  • Experience in working in the field for extended periods of time.
  • A strong publication record.

Advantageous:

  • A track record of palaeoenvironmental fieldwork or analytical experience in the tropics (particularly in the Americas or Asia).
  • Experience with archaeological, historical, and palaeoenvironmental datasets as well as their relative pros and cons in land-use reconstructions.
  • Knowledge or experience of pre- and post-colonial changes in human activities and land-use in Southeast Asia as well as the tropics more broadly.
  • Experience leading and coordinating fieldwork teams and the analysis of palaeoenvironmental archives.
  • Outreach skills in the context of communicated climate science or the ramifications of human land-use to a non-academic audience.

For more information click "LINK TO ORIGINAL" below.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

https://www.shh.mpg.de/1473261/postdoc-pantropocene-palaeoenvironmental-research

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Disciplines

Anthropology

Archaeology

Study Levels

Postdoctoral

Research

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

Germany