Scientists sought for glacier research
The CAS Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research announced recently it would seek leading global scientists in plateau research to work on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
The CAS institute is providing ten senior research positions, whose annual salaries range from 80,000 to 150,000 yuan (9,700 to 18,000 US dollars) and include other perks.
The invited researchers are expected to focus on geodynamics, environmental and climate change, as well as atmosphere and earth face circles.
Successful candidates must hold doctoral degrees, be under the age of 45 and have a minimum of eight years' relevant research experience. They should also have published at least four academic papers in journals cited by the Science Citation Index, said a human resources official with the institute.
The Institute has already accepted Lonnie Thompson, a world recognized glacier expert who is also a professor at Ohio State University, to be vice institute director of academics.
With Prof. Thompson as a conduit, the institute is cooperating with US research groups to carry out joint research programs. One such endeavor is to take ice cores from icecaps in Southwest Tibet some time in the latter half this year.
Yao Tandong, director of the institute, said Wednesday in an interview with Xinhua that the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research needs to borrow foreign knowledge and experience in glacier and environmental research.
The CAS started scientific research on the plateau roughly 50 years ago. In March 2003, the CAS reshuffled its glacier research resources and renamed the research body.
The institute targets at the toughest subjects in the field, rather than scattering limited resources in miscellaneous research projects.
In contrast to other CAS organs, the institute is headquartered in Beijing and has centers in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region, and Kunming, capital of Yunnan Province.
Most researchers work in labs in Beijing, which are also platforms for international academic exchange.
The Lhasa center oversees construction and maintenance of outdoor observation stations, while the Kunming center is responsible for establishing a plateau plant samples reserve and coordinating biological research programs.
The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is the world's highest. (Xinhuanet April 13)