Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Fotograf Morten Hjertø 30th April 2026 Languages English English English The Department of Ocean Operations and Civil Engineering has a vacancy for a Postdoctoral Fellow in AI-Integrated
-
Soil, Feed and Food” (funded by the Research Council of Norway). PFAS, often called “forever chemicals”, are among the most persistent pollutants of our time. Found in soil, water, animals, and humans
-
in environmental sampling (water, sediment, soil), hydrological monitoring, field campaign logistics and harsh or remote environments. Strong data analysis skills and experience with statistical tools
-
accumulation in water, soil, biota, and plant‑based foods poses a significant threat to food safety. This PhD project will generate new insights into PFAS behavior under Northern environmental conditions and in
-
the Southern Ocean with a focus on marine microbial communities and the nutrients and carbon cycle in the King Haakon VII Sea off the coast of Dronning Maud Land. The position shall, among other things: Process
-
of radionuclides and chemical contaminants in various samples (water, biota and sediments). Assessing combined effects (toxicokinetic and toxicodynamic) Organization and analysis of data, writing and dissemination
-
continues to undergo profound physical transformations. The prospect of a “blue,” seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean introduces new risks and reshapes patterns of activity. On land, melting permafrost and
-
increased interest from farmers in later years. Being a grain legume, it fixes nitrogen through its symbiosis with N-fixing bacteria. Thus, it needs little fertilizer, leaves N in the soil for the next crop
-
layers between the Earth’s surface and the atmosphere, to the dynamics and interactions in the Earth's crust, soils, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere. Our strategy focuses on four main topics
-
on (ground-, soil-)water chemistry and carbon in cold climate zones (e.g. permafrost regions in Finnmark) and to expand hydrogeological observations during upcoming field campaigns. Potential methods include