Emilie Beaudon

Ohio State University-Main Campus

<p class="Normal1">Emilie is an ice core chemist and an assistant professor at the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center (School of Earth Sciences, The Ohio State University) where her research focuses on extracting multi-century records of black carbon, ions and trace element atmospheric contamination within deep ice cores retrieved from Polar and mid-latitude glaciers. She is currently leading an interdisciplinary project aimed at identifying the environmental ‘message’ carried by mineral dust entrapped in Tibetan glaciers and its link to the Indian Summer Monsoon- Westerlies interplay.

A geoscientist by training, she has been conducting glaciology field research on ocean-atmosphere-anthroposphere-cryosphere linkages in polar and low latitudes regions, working in Adélie Land (Antarctica), the European High Arctic (Svalbard and Jan Mayen Island), the European Alps, and the Peruvian Andes.

Before joining The Ohio State Ice Core Paleoclimatology Research Group, she earned her Ph.D. at the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland (Rovaniemi, Finland), investigating the environmental signal contained in snow, firn, and multi-century ice core records from Svalbard.

Prior to her graduate studies, she held the position of manager of the Glaciology Laboratory at the Dumont D’Urville station in Adélie Land and became the 10th French woman to overwinter in Antarctica.   

https://byrd.osu.edu/people/beaudon.1 

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