Eystein Jansen

Eystein Jansen (born February 28, 1953 ) is a Norwegian professor in marine geology and paleoceanography at the University of Bergen, and researcher and former Director of the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research (BCCR).

He graduated from the University of Bergen with a MSc-degree in paleoceanography in 1981, and a PhD degree in 1984 with a thesis entitled “Late Weichselian paleoceanography in the Nordic Seas[1]”.

After his PhD Jansen was given a researcher position and charged with building up the National Laboratory for light stable isotope geochemistry at the University of Bergen, which was established in 1983.[2] The establishment of the laboratory brought Jansen into contact with many of the leading figures internationally in the emerging field of paleoclimatology, and in particular his close contact with University of Cambridge scientist Nicholas Shackleton became formative for his career. In 1985 Jansen was hired as tenured associate professor at the University of Bergen, and he was in 1993 promoted to full professor.[3]

Jansen has published about 200 scientific papers on the relationship between ocean circulation and climate change with emphasis on the build-up and demise of ice sheets.[4] Most of his studies are from the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions, but his work also encompasses oceans in the Southern Hemisphere and the tropics. His work combines geochemical and sedimentological methods on ocean sediments acquired through active participation the Ocean Drilling Program, the Images program and many cruises on Norwegian vessels. In 2014 Jansen received an ERC Synergy Grant (ice2ice) to work with three other principal investigators on abrupt climate change

Jansen initiated and headed the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research as Director from its founding in 2000 to 2013.[5] The Centre was awarded status as Norwegian Centre of Excellence by the Norwegian Research Council in 2002.[6]

He is a member of the Scientific Council of the European Research Council,[7] he is the Academic Director of the Academia Europaea Bergen Knowledge Hub,[8] and heads the Geoscience group of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.[9] Jansen is also co-director of the SapienCE Centre which is a Norwegian Centre of Excellence awarded by the Norwegian Research Council in 2017,[10] and hosted by the University of Bergen, integrating archaeology, climate science and cognitive and neurosciences in studies of the emergence of modern behaviour in Homo sapiens in Southern Africa 120.000-50.000 years ago.

Jansen was a co-ordinating lead author for the paleoclimate chapter of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report and was one of the lead authors of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report.

Awards and memberships in learned societies

gollark: In ABR-EV?
gollark: This is a much better design and I really should have done it this way from the start, wow.
gollark: What?
gollark: I can drop all the horrible interbridge stuff if I just [REDACTED] all is bee.
gollark: Is that relevant to the problem?

References

  1. Jansen, Eystein (January 1983). "Late Weichselian paleoceanography of the southeastern Norwegian Sea". Norsk Geologisk Tidsskrift. 63: 117–146 via Researchgate.
  2. "Eystein Jansen hedres for livslang innsats". Universitetet i Bergen (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  3. Jansen, Eystein. "Eystein Jansen CV" (PDF). Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  4. "Eystein Jansen - Google Scholar-sitater". scholar.google.no. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  5. "The Climate Diplomat: Eystein Jansen in interview". University of Bergen. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  6. "The Climate Diplomat: Eystein Jansen in interview". University of Bergen. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  7. "Eystein Jansen is a new board member of the European Research Council". Drupal. 28 June 2019. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  8. Scholz, AuthorMarkus (2018-02-22). "The Bergen Hub Director: Collaboration on marine, maritime and polar affairs". AEBergen. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  9. "Medlemmer | Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi". www.dnva.no. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
  10. "Centre for Early Sapiens Behaviour". University of Bergen. Retrieved 2020-05-07.
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