Graduate opportunity: N critical load assessment in the Pacific Northwest

A graduate opportunity is available to examine N critical loads in the Pacific 
Northwest.  This is a collaborative project with scientists from the National 
Park Service and the possibility exists for field work in Olympic, North 
Cascades, and Mount Rainier National Parks and the Lewis and Clark National 
Historical Park.  The successful applicants must be capable of field work for 
extended periods.  Successful applicants will join a highly collaborative, 
interdisciplinary group with the opportunity to focus on carbon and nitrogen 
dynamics, stable isotope analyses, Earth system modeling 
(http://bioearth.wsu.edu/), as well as the integration of biophysical sciences 
with policy (https://cereo.wsu.edu/c-nspire-certificate-program/#Overview).  
The WSU Stable Isotope Core Facility is also a state-of-the-art research 
facility with seven mass spectrometers and supporting equipment.   For further 
information please contact Prof. R. Dave Evans ([email protected]) in the School 
of Biological Sciences.

More information on the School of Biological Sciences can be found at 
sbs.wsu.edu.  The graduate training program offers many opportunities for 
excellence.  Every SBS student is fully funded with generous stipends through 
teaching or research assistantships, accompanying tuition waivers, and health 
benefits. Plus, SBS endowments provide over $100,000 per year in student awards 
to facilitate research, training, and professional travel. PhDs receive up to 
$10,000 in guaranteed support for research-related travel and MS students 
receive up to $5,000 in guaranteed support. The campus houses outstanding 
facilities, including plant and animal growth chambers, managed field sites, a 
modern genomics core, stable isotope facility, and a campus-wide computer 
cluster.

Washington State University is a land grant, comprehensive research institution 
with an enrollment of about 30,000 students with state-of-the-art facilities in 
ecology.  The University is one of the largest residential universities in the 
West and is in close proximity to both the Northern Rocky Mountains and the 
Cascade Range.  The campus is only eight miles from the University of Idaho in 
Moscow, ID.  Both Pullman and Moscow are friendly, mid-sized towns on the 
rolling hills of the unique Palouse region.   The two towns and campuses 
provide an academically and culturally rich community. The area offers great 
parks, bike paths, restaurants, farmer's markets and unbeatable opportunities 
for recreation in the adjacent mountains and rivers.
For more information regarding the Graduate School applications at WSU, see:  
gradschool.wsu.edu
If you have any questions regarding the application process, please contact:
Jenny Davis ([email protected])
The deadline for application of prospective students is January 10, 2018.

_________________
R. Dave Evans
Professor and Associate Director,
    School of Biological Sciences
Director, WSU Stable Isotope Core Laboratory

School of Biological Sciences
PO Box 644236
Washington State University
Pullman, WA   99164-4236

Office: 509-335-7466
Lab:    509-335-6154
FAX:    509-335-3184
http://sbs.wsu.edu/faculty/?faculty/48
http://www.isotopes.wsu.edu<http://www.isotopes.wsu.edu/>

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