Ewch i’r prif gynnwys
Yr Athro Ian Hall

Yr Athro Ian Hall

Athro Ymchwil

Email
hall@cardiff.ac.uk
Telephone
+44 (0)29 2087 5612 / +44 (0)29 2087 6689
Fax:
+44 (0)29 2087 4326
Campuses
1.04, Y Prif Adeilad, Plas y Parc, Caerdydd, CF10 3AT
Comment
Sylwebydd y cyfryngau

Trosolwg

Interests

  • Applications of palaeoclimate proxy reconstruction
  • Marine sedimentology
  • Past ocean circulation
  • Late Pleistocene and Holocene climate variability.

Bywgraffiad

  • 2009-present:   Professor in Palaeoceanography, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences,         Cardiff University
  • 2006-2009:        Reader in Palaeoceanography, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Cardiff University
  • 2003-2006:        Senior lecturer, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Cardiff University
  • 2001:                 Research Fellow, National Institute of Atmospheric and Water Research, NZ
  • 2000-2003:        Lecturer in Palaeoceanography, School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Cardiff University
  • 1998-2000:        Research Fellow, Hughes Hall College, University of Cambridge
  • 1997-2000:        Senior Research Fellow, Department of Earth Sciences University of Cambridge
  • 1993-1997:        Research Associate, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge

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My interests lie in the generation of innovative high-resolution palaeoclimate reconstructions. This is achieved through the development, application and integrated analysis of sedimentary, isotopic and geochemical proxies that quantitatively carry the physical signals of differing components of the climate system, for instance surface ocean conditions (temperature structure, salinity) and the flow speed and hydrography of deep ocean currents, during key periods of past climate change.

Current projects include: ocean change in the North Atlantic during the Late Holocene (annual to multi-decadal timescales), ice-ocean linkages and abrupt climate change during the last glacial, and the role of Agulhas Leakage in climate variability of the Pleistocene. The latter includes being co-chief of IODP Expedition 361 (SAFARI) scheduled for drilling in 2016. He is a director of the Climate Change Consortium of Wales, chair of the NERC BOSCORF SC and member of the executive committee of the 'International Marine Process Reconstruction Study' (IMPRESS/IMAGESII) programme.

Supervision