The Micropalaeontological Society

The Micropalaeontological Society

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Internship Opportunity: Deep-sea sediments off the Al Wajh Carbonate Platform, Red Sea

Professor Volker Vahrenkamp’s research team is currently recruiting for an up to 6-month internship joining the Carbonate Reservoirs Studies Group (CaResS Geology) at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Project description: The Red Sea records climatic and associated sea-level and hydrological changes throughout the Quaternary. Extreme fluxes of windblown dust reflect high winds and extreme aridity in the region associated with glacial phases, meanwhile, geochemical data demonstrate enhanced humidity associated with interglacial phases and sea-level highstands. In the northern Red Sea, these environmental changes have influenced the development of steep-sloped shallow-water carbonate platforms and fringing reefs. Al Wajh is a land-attached carbonate platform in the northern Red Sea; it is almost completely rimmed by a reef shoal belt and characterised by a large and deep lagoon. Along the Red Sea basin, the deep-sea sediments are mainly controlled by the pelagic sedimentation and a background aeolian and sporadic fluvial input. While the deep-sea sediments from the southern and central regions near the axial trough and the African margin have been the most studied, the climate-driven deep-sea sedimentation basin off the Al Wajh carbonate in the northern region remains unclear.

Apply here!

The Micropalaeontological Society

Towards the advancement of the education of the public in the study of Micropalaeontology

The Micropalaeontological Society (TMS) exists “to advance the education of the public in the study of Micropalaeontology” and is operated “exclusively for scientific and educational purposes and not for profit”. It was initiated as The British Micropalaeontological Group (BMG) in 1970, following a proposal by Professor Leslie Moore of the University of Sheffield and several colleagues who wished to organise a group of palaeontologists with a mutual interest in the micropalaeontological study of British type sections and the provision of a forum for the communication of their results.

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