Yongsong Huang

Yongsong Huang is a Chinese-American organic geochemist, biogeochemist and astrobiologist. He is a professor of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences at Brown University.[1] Huang researches the development of lipid biomarker and their isotopic ratios as quantitative proxies for paleoclimate and paleoenviromental studies and subsequent application of these proxies to study mechanisms controlling climate change and environmental response to climate change at a variety of time scales.

Yongsong Huang
Alma materUniversity of Science and Technology of China (B.Sc.)
Sichuan University (M.S.)
Chinese Academy of Sciences (Ph.D.)
University of Bristol (Ph.D.)
Scientific career
FieldsOrganic geochemistry, paleoclimatology, astrobiology
InstitutionsUniversity of Bristol
Pennsylvania State University
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Brown University
Doctoral advisorGeoffrey Eglinton

Education

Huang received a B.Sc. in Geochemistry from University of Science and Technology of China in 1984.[2] Huang then received a M.S. in Analytical Chemistry from Sichuan University.[2] Huang earned his first Ph.D. in Petroleum Geochemistry from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1990.[2] He then earned a second Ph.D. in Organic Geochemistry from the University of Bristol in 1997, as a student of Geoffrey Eglinton.[2]

Career and research

Huang is an organic geochemist, biogeochemist and astrobiologist.[3][4] After graduating from the University of Bristol, Huang joined the lab of Katherine H. Freeman at Pennsylvania State University as a postdoctoral research associate.[2] Huang periodically worked as a guest investigator with Timothy Eglinton at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution during his postdoc.[2] In 2000, Huang joined the faculty of Brown University, where he was awarded tenure in 2012.[2]

Huang's primary fields are organic geochemistry, geochemistry, and paleoclimatology. He is particularly well known for his work developing organic geochemical proxies of climate change and reconstructing climates sediments.[5][6][7]

According to Scopus, he has published 187 research articles so far with 9681 citations and has an H-index of 55.[8]

Editorial activities

  • 2000 to present: Member of the editorial board for the Journal of Paleolimnology.[2]

Academic honors

  • 1991-1992: British Royal Society Queen's Fellowship.[2]
  • 2001: Salamon Award, Brown University[2]
  • 2009: Hans Fellow, Germany[2]
  • 2011-2012: Teagle Fellow, Brown University[2]

Notable Student and Advisees[2]

Students

  • Juzhi Hou (Ph.D. 2008)
  • William D’Andrea (Ph.D. 2008)
  • Jonathan Nichols (Ph.D. 2009)
  • Jaime Toney (Ph.D. 2011)
  • Susanna Theroux (Ph.D. 2012)
  • Elizabeth Thomas (Ph.D. 2014)
  • William C. Daniels (Ph.D. 2017)
  • William Longo (Ph.D. 2017)

Selected works

Journal articles

  • Northern hemisphere controls on tropical southeast African climate during the past 60,000 years.[9]
  • Climate change as the dominant control on glacial-interglacial variations in C3 and C4 plant abudnance.[10]
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References

  1. "Huang, Yongsong". vivo.brown.edu. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  2. "Yongsong Huang CV" (PDF). Researchers at Brown. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  3. "Yongsong Huang". Researchers at Brown. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  4. "Yongsong Huang". Institute at Brown for Environment and Society. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  5. "Cold Snap Drove Vikings From Greenland, Study Suggests". Live Science. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  6. "A history of snowfall on Greenland, hidden in ancient leaf waxes". University at Buffalo. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  7. "Ancient Indonesian climate shift linked to glacial cycle". Science Daily. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  8. "Scopus preview - Scopus - Author details (Huang, Yongsong)". www.scopus.com. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  9. Tierney, J. E.; Russell, J. M.; Huang, Y.; Damste, J. S. S.; Hopmans, E. C.; Cohen, A. S. (2008-10-10). "Northern Hemisphere Controls on Tropical Southeast African Climate During the Past 60,000 Years". Science. 322 (5899): 252–255. doi:10.1126/science.1160485. ISSN 0036-8075.
  10. Climate change as the dominant control, Science, retrieved 2020-08-06
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