Ph.D. student assistantship available

The O'Halloran lab in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Conservation 
at Clemson University currently has an opening for a Ph.D. student starting in 
summer or fall of 2017.  We seek an enthusiastic and inquisitive student who is 
interested in understanding mechanisms of land-atmosphere interactions with 
particular focus on forests.  Potential broad research topics include: 
environmental controls on managed forest productivity, coastal carbon cycling, 
aerosol new particle formation, albedo radiative forcing, and coastal forest 
disturbance ecology. The student will have the opportunity to work at two 
AmeriFlux sites in Virginia (switchgrass and loblolly pine) where Dr. 
O'Halloran is co-PI, as well as take a leading role in developing new flux 
tower sites in coastal South Carolina, where potential host ecosystems include 
longleaf pine forest, baldcypress-tupelo wetland forest, and saltwater marsh.  
A student with sufficient incoming transfer credits will spend one year 
completing coursework on main campus and then relocate to the Baruch Institute 
of Coastal Ecology and Forest Science to join the lab group and complete their 
fieldwork and writing.  A full research assistantship (including stipend and 
tuition waver) is available for three years, but students will also be 
encouraged to seek their own funding through national fellowships (e.g. USDA, 
NASA, NSF).

The Baruch Institute of Coastal Ecology and Forest Science is located just 
outside of historic Georgetown, SC.  Under a long-term agreement with the Belle 
W. Baruch Foundation, the Institute is located on the 16,000-acre Hobcaw Barony 
at the southern end of the Waccamaw Neck and is just 35 miles south of Myrtle 
Beach and 60 miles north of Charleston. Hobcaw Barony is located on the 
Atlantic Ocean, bordered by Winyah Bay and North Inlet Estuary. The Institute 
is housed in a new 12,000 sq. ft. LEED-certified office building with an 
adjoining 7,000 sq. ft. laboratory and support facility.  Temporary housing is 
available on site for visiting scientists and students in a new 10-bed cottage.

Clemson University is a highly selective, public, land-grant university serving 
a uniquely driven and highly accomplished student body. Ranked as a top-25 
national public university by U.S. News & World Report, Clemson is a science- 
and engineering-oriented university dedicated to teaching, research and 
service. Clemson recently achieved the status of Carnegie classification of 
Highest Research Activities ("R1"). The University is located in a college town 
setting on Lake Hartwell within view of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Clemson is a 
2-hour drive from Atlanta, GA or Charlotte, NC. For more information, please 
visit: http://www.clemson.edu/about/

Required Qualifications: Bachelor's degree in forestry, ecology, atmospheric 
science or other closely related environmental science. Strong quantitative 
abilities, self-motivation and desire to do field work in coastal South 
Carolina, where the work is physically demanding in a hot, humid environment.

Preferred Qualifications: M.S. degree (highly preferred) in forestry, ecology, 
atmospheric science or other closely related environmental science.  
Programming experience in MATLAB or R.  Fieldwork experience in ecology or 
forestry.

To apply, send a CV, unofficial GRE and TOEFL scores (if available) and a cover 
letter stating your previous experience, interest in this specific position, 
and future goals to Dr. O'Halloran.  Review of applicants begins immediately.  
The official university deadline to apply for summer entry is March 15.

Contact info and more details about the lab are available here: 
http://www.clemson.edu/cafls/faculty_staff/profiles/tohallo

____________________________________________
Thomas L. O'Halloran, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Baruch Institute of Coastal Ecology & Forest Science
Dept. of Forestry and Environmental Conservation
Clemson University
toha...@clemson.edu
___________________________________________

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