- Nick McCave
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Professor Nick McCave Nationality British Fields Climate Change and Sedimentology Ian Nicholas (Nick) McCave, was the Woodwardian Professor of Geology at the University of Cambridge Department of Earth Sciences and a fellow of St John's College from 1985 to 2008. His current research topic is "The Sediment Record of the Deep-Sea Circulation" in the area of "Environmental change and marine geochemistry". He is primarily a marine sedimentologist.
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Research Summary
70% of the Earth is covered by water, so information about the marine environment is vital in understanding how the Earth's surface system works. Nick McCave's research looks at perturbations in the deep oceans, using evidence from micro-fossils combined with carbon dating, to obtain information on pre-historical climate change. It is important to understand the normal cycles of climate change, in order to assess the degree to which the global warming we are experiencing now is caused by man, and the likely consequences by analysis of past analogues. One problem is the interaction between atmospheric climate change and the observed changes in the ocean currents. There is a 'chicken and egg' question: are the perturbations seen in atmospheric CO2 concentrations forced by the vigour of the deep ocean currents, or vice versa?
McCave uses monitoring points in the North Atlantic Ocean, Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean to study how the Earth’s meridional heat flux is distributed by warm surface-ocean currents and cold deep-ocean currents.
Research Groups
- Glaciology and Quaternary Science research cluster
- Godwin Laboratory for Palaeoclimate Research
Selected Biography
- 1969 - 1985: Lecturer (until 1976), Reader (until 1985) at the University of East Anglia School of Environmental Sciences
- 1978 - 1999: Adjunct Scientist (until 1987), Guest Investigator (1999) at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
- 1988 - 1998: Head of the Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge
- 1985 - 2008: Woodwardian Professor of Geology, University of Cambridge
Other Professional Activities
- 2003 - 05: Member of the Steering Committee for NERC's Rapid Climate Change programme
- 2003–present: Member of the Steering Committee for NERC's Abrupt Climate Change programme
- 2001 and 2008: Member of the UK Research Assessment Exercise panel for Earth and Environmental Sciences
External links
Categories:- Living people
- British geologists
- Academics of the University of East Anglia
- Fellows of St John's College, Cambridge
- Lyell Medal winners
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