Join us in this fully-funded PhD project and investigate interactions between debris flows and vegetation! We are looking for two PhD candidates.
Your job Debris flows are fast-moving landslides that can devastate people and property. In many regions they interact strongly with vegetation, but how this reduces their hazardous impact is surprisingly poorly understood. This critically limits the design of protection forests, as well as anticipation of effects of climate change, wildfires, and deforestation on debris-flow hazards. We currently lack tools to systematically and quantitatively study these interactions. Here we will develop new experimental techniques, wherein we mimic vegetation with small-scale 3D-printed trees and live seedlings, which design will be based on field data. Experiments will be set up in the
debris-flow lab in the
Earth Simulation Laboratory of Utrecht University. Outcomes of the project will be used to design and promote sustainable mitigation of debris-flow hazards through the smart use of vegetation, for example through guidelines on the optimal design of protection forests.
You will help design and perform the novel laboratory experiments and collect and analyse field data for comparison. We work closely together as a team, including international collaborators.
To support academic and personal development, PhD candidates follow courses and assist in teaching Earth Sciences at Bachelor's and Master's level. Together these activities amount to twenty percent of the contracted time.