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Three-year PhD position in Environmental Geosciences (Funded by Amidex)

European Commission

France

Sur place

EUR 30 000 - 45 000

Plein temps

Il y a 28 jours

Résumé du poste

Une renowned organisation en France propose un poste de chercheur pour étudier la variabilité hydroclimatique et la gestion de l'eau dans la région méditerranéenne. Le candidat travaillera sur des archives environnementales et archéologiques pour comprendre les impacts des variations climatiques. Ce poste offre une opportunité de participer à des recherches sur des sujets scientifiques d'actualité, dans un environnement étudiant et collaboratif.

Qualifications

  • Master en Géosciences ou domaines connexes requis.
  • Capacités de travail sur le terrain sont nécessaires.
  • Doit posséder des compétences en pensée analytique et en travail d'équipe.

Responsabilités

  • Reconstructer l'histoire hydroclimatique à partir d'archives environnementales.
  • Effectuer des analyses morphologiques et pétrographiques.
  • Mapper les terrasses alluviales et les barrages travertins.

Connaissances

Autonomie
Travail d'équipe
Pensée analytique
Écoute et observation
Flexibilité et adaptabilité

Formation

Master’s degree en Géosciences, Géochimie, Chimie, ou Géographie Physique

Description du poste

Organisation/Company Aix-Marseille Université Research Field Environmental science » Earth science Environmental science » Other Geography » Other Physics » Other Researcher Profile First Stage Researcher (R1) Country France Application Deadline 30 Nov 2025 - 16:00 (UTC) Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Full-time Hours Per Week 38 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No

Offer Description

RESEARCHER PROFILE: PhD/ R1: First stage Researcher
RESEARCH FIELD(S)1: Geosciences
MAIN SUB RESEARCH FIELD OR DISCIPLINES1: Isotopic Geosciences

JOB /OFFER DESCRIPTION

Hydroclimatic variability and water management in the northwestern Mediterranean (Provence, SE France): reconstructions from environmental and archaeological carbonate archives from the Quaternary to the present day.

In Mediterranean regions, water availability is a key constraint increasingly pressured by climate change, with profound environmental, socio-economic, and health impacts. Provence (SE France) exemplifies these issues: rainfall has declined, flood intensity increased, and droughts lengthened over recent decades. To anticipate future challenges, investigating past hydroclimatic responses through natural and cultural archives is essential. Speleothems and fluvial tufas are robust proxies for Holocene hydroclimate dynamics, while carbonate deposits in Roman hydraulic structures provide unique insights into ancient water management under climatic stress.

The “Provence Verte” region, especially the upper Argens catchment, offers an exceptional field site with karstic and fluvial systems intertwined with rich archaeological remains (oppida, aqueducts, mills). Laminated carbonates—speleothems, tufas, aqueduct concretions—record environmental (precipitation, temperature) and anthropogenic signals. Speleothems from the Sainte-Baume massif yield continuous climatic archives, with isotopic (δ¹⁸O,δ¹³C) and elemental data revealing fine-scale variability and extremes. Upper Argens tufas, still active despite declining carbonate deposition since ~4000 BP, are rare archives of hydrological history. Roman engineering in the region established extensive water networks; studying these, alongside annually laminated carbonates, enables reconstruction of past climate and water use strategies. Historical data from later periods (Middle Ages to Modern times) complement this approach, assessing continuity or change in hydroclimate and societal adaptation.

Funded by AMIDEX, PCR “Plaine de Saint-Maximin,” Arkaïa “TRAGENS,” and the AQUEROM project, this research combines intensive field and laboratory work. Field tasks include detailed geomorphological mapping of alluvial terraces and travertine dams, cave exploration, and targeted sampling of tufas and speleothems. Laboratory analyses encompass morphological and petrographic characterization (binocular, optical, digital, epifluorescence microscopy), lamination counting via micro-XRF and tomography, micro-drilling, U/Th dating with MC-ICPMS, and elemental analyses (ICP-OES, ICP-MS, LA-MC-ICPMS). Stable isotopes (δ¹⁸O,δ¹³C) are measured by mass spectrometry in carbonates. Modern waters are analysed for chemical and isotopic composition (electrophoresis, laser spectrometry) to clarify the contemporary hydrogeochemical system. Recent instrumental data (river discharge, precipitation, tree rings) provide calibration points for interpreting carbonate records. This integrated approach aims to reconstruct detailed hydroclimatic history and inform sustainable water management in Mediterranean regions vulnerable to intensified drought.

TYPE OF CONTRACT:TEMPORARY
JOB STATUS:FULL TIME
APPLICATION DEADLINE:30/11/2025 17:00 Paris time
ENVISAGED STARTING DATE:01/01/2026
ENVISAGED DURATION: 36 months
JOB NOT FUNDED THROUGH AN EU RESEARCH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME

QUALIFICATIONS, REQUIRED RESEARCH FIELDS, REQUIRED EDUCATION LEVEL, PROFESSIONAL SKILLS, OTHER RESEARCH REQUIREMENTS

Master’s degree (MSc or M2) in Geosciences, Geochemistry, Chemistry, or Physical Geography.

Soft skills:Autonomy, Teamwork, Analytical and critical thinking, Listening and observing, Empathy, Flexibility and adaptability, field work capacities.

REQUESTED DOCUMENTS OF APPLICATION, ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA, SELECTION PROCESS
transcript of marks for the last two years
Master's diploma

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