Jens O. Herrle

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Jens Herrle (* 1968 ) is a German micropalaeontologist . He is professor at the Institute for Geosciences at Frankfurt's Goethe University and spokesman for the Geology and Geophysics Working Group of the German Society for Polar Research .

Life

Herrle studied geology at the Ruhr University Bochum and graduated in 1998 with a diploma. He then became a research assistant and assistant at the Paleontological Institute of the University of Tübingen ; In 2002 he received his doctorate there with summa cum laude as Dr. rer. nat. He received an award for the best dissertation at the Geological Faculty.

From 2002 to 2005 he was a postdoc at the ETH Zurich and the University of Southampton

From 2005 to 2006 he was a lecturer in the Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of Liverpool and from 2006 to 2009 Assistant Professor in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Alberta in Edmonton .

In 2009 he was appointed to a chair at the Institute for Geosciences at Goethe University Frankfurt. In 2014 he took part in an expedition to the islands of Axel Heiberg and Ellesmere in Nunavut with Claudia Schröder-Adams . In 2015/2016, Herrle Joubin James was visiting professor at the Institute for Eearth Science at the University of Toronto.

Since 2018, together with Cornelia Spiegel from the University of Bremen, he has been the spokesperson for the Geology and Geophysics Working Group of the German Society for Polar Research .

Publications

Individual evidence

  1. Prof. Dr. Jens O. Herrle , Herrle's homepage.
  2. ^ Institute for Geosciences
  3. ARCTIC GREENHOUSE , SoGerman, 2017-03-22
  4. Mid-Cretaceous High Arctic stratigraphy, climate, and Oceanic Anoxic Events , Jens O. Herrle; Claudia J. Schröder-Adams; William Davis; Adam T. Pugh; Jennifer M. Galloway; Jared Fath, Geology, 2015.
  5. JENS HERRLE JOINS THE DEPARTMENT AS THE JOUBIN JAMES VISITING PROFESSOR , University of Toronto, accessed 2019-06-09.
  6. Geology and Geophysics Working Group, German Society for Polar Research, accessed 2019-06-09.