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- Graduate Position
Are you interested in studying the future of the East Antarctic ice sheet, with the support of competent and friendly colleagues in an international environment? Are you looking for an employer that invests in sustainable employeeship and offers safe, favorable working conditions? We welcome you to apply for a PhD position at Uppsala University.
The Department of Earth Sciences at Uppsala University is Sweden´s largest and most versatile department of its kind. The department has approximately 300 employees. Our activities are interdisciplinary and combine natural science and technology with social science. We have research programs in air, water and landscape science; geophysics; natural resources and sustainable development; petrology, mineralogy and tectonics; paleobiology, and wind energy. By investigating the history of Earth, we understand how our planet has developed over time and how sustainable development benefits from this knowledge. Read more here; Department of Earth Sciences
The announced position is in the research program Air, Water and Landscape Science (LUVAL) which brings together research and education in hydrology, meteorology, environmental analysis and physical geography. The research in physical geography has a main interest in cold environments, with a primary focus on glaciological topics, but also other aspects of the cryosphere.
This doctoral project will be part of SEAL, the National Research School of Excellence in Arctic and Antarctic Research Training. SEAL’s research environment is built on strong collaboration between Swedish universities, which together offer an internationally competitive, field-based doctoral school with unique infrastructure and integrated courses, supervised by leading national and international polar researchers. The research school encompasses the full spectrum of polar expertise—from glaciology, oceanography, and climate modelling to radar, remote sensing, and technology development, as well as social sciences and Indigenous perspectives. The doctoral student will also be part of the international research programme iQ2300 – East Antarctic Sea level rise contribution in 2300, with fieldwork logistical support from the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, coordinated by Stockholm University.
The project follows up on recent experiments to estimate ice thickness on mountain glaciers in the Arctic and globally (see e.g. Frank and Van Pelt, 2024; Van Pelt and Frank, 2025), and connects to an ongoing project on modelling of the Greenland ice sheet. The project will include collaboration with Utrecht University, Mid Sweden University, Gothenburg University, Stockholm University, and the Danish Meteorological Institute.


