PhD position Modeling Post-impact recolonization of Chicxulub impact structure
- Employer
- University of Texas Jackson School of Geosciences
- Location
- Austin, Texas
- Salary
- 41701 - 46346 €/Year
- Closing date
- Jan 8, 2025
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- Discipline
- Geochemistry, Hydrology, Interdisciplinary/Other, Mineral and Rock Physics, Natural Hazards, Near Surface Geophysics, Ocean Science, Planetary Sciences, Seismology, Solid Earth Geophysics, Space Physics, Tectonophysics, Volcanology, Geochemistry, and Petrology
- Career Level
- Student / Graduate
- Education Level
- Bachelors
- Job Type
- Internship
- Relocation Cost
- No Relocation
- Sector Type
- Academia
Job Details
This NASA funded PhD project will model the recolonization of the Chicxulub impact structure during the post-impact hydrothermal circulation. The aim of this project is to try and understand the role of impacts in the evolution and persistence of life on Earth and other planets. The proposed modeling is informed and motivated by observations from IODP-ICDP Expedition 364 that drilled into the impact structure. In particular, the peak-ring granite was found to be more porous and permeable than expected and contains increased biomass. Your role will be to combine models of hydrothermal circulation with models of biomass growth and transport to explore the pathways for the recolonization of the impact structure.
We are looking for a motivated graduate student with background in geophysics, subsurface engineering or applied mathematics with excellent quantitative and programming skills that is interested in planetary habitability (habitability.utexas.edu). The PhD is in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at the University of Texas at Austin under the supervision of Profs. Marc Hesse and Sean Gulick and starts in summer or fall 2025. Interested students should contact Marc Hesse (mhesse@jsg.utexas.edu) for more information and apply to the to the PhD program in Geoscience of the for the Jackson School of Geosciences (www.jsg.utexas.edu/academics/graduate/admissions/) by January 1, 2025.
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at the the University of Texas at Austin
The mission of the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and the Jackson School of Geosciences is to advance our understanding of the Earth and to educate the next generations of geoscientists. The University of Texas at Austin has one of the oldest and most prestigious Geosciences programs in the world. U.S. News & World Report has ranked us consistently as a top Earth Sciences program. And we are also one of the country’s largest Geosciences programs, with leadership in all major research areas, from the solid Earth, to surface processes, to climate and environment, and planetary science.
Homepage: https://eps.jsg.utexas.edu/
Company
The Jackson School of Geosciences is among the most established and well-regarded geoscience programs in the world. The school includes the University’s Department of Geological Sciences, one of the country’s oldest geoscience departments, and two world-renowned research units, the Institute for Geophysics and the Bureau of Economic Geology. The school is home to the world’s largest academic geoscience community with 58 faculty, 150 research staff, and one of the largest combined graduate and undergraduate enrollments of any major geoscience program.
- Website
- http://www.jsg.utexas.edu/
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