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Professor Liang-Chi Wang (PI)圖片

Professor Liang-Chi Wang (PI)

He is a full Professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Chung Cheng University since February 2025. He earned his Ph.D. from the Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at National Taiwan University. During his doctoral studies, he conducted research at Kyushu University in Japan and the University of Göttingen in Germany, supported by Ph.D. scholarships from the Japan-Taiwan Exchange Association and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD).

His primary research interests include terrestrial palynology, palaeoecology, biodiversity dynamics, paleoclimatology, fire history, and the history of human settlement. His work focuses on late Quaternary palaeoenvironmental changes in Taiwan and mainland China, across diverse ecosystems such as floodplains, lagoons, mangroves, and montane vegetation.

His research involves using multi-proxy analyses of sediments to reconstruct regional paleoenvironmental records and explore potential climate dynamics and human activity records. Future research will focus on Anthropocene sediments, integrating microfossils, stable isotope analysis, and radiometric dating techniques for high-resolution reconstruction of recent and Holocene environments. This will provide a scientific basis for formulating relatively sustainable policies in the context of global warming.

 

Professor Kauro Kashmir (Visiting Professor)圖片

Professor Kauro Kashmir (Visiting Professor)

Kaoru Kashima is a paleoenvironmental scientist and a retired Associate Professor of Kyushu University, specializing in the reconstruction of past environmental and climate changes using sedimentary records, fossil diatoms, and multi-proxy approaches. His research has focused on coastal and lacustrine systems, with particular emphasis on Holocene sea-level change, monsoon variability, and extreme events such as typhoons and tsunamis, as well as their interactions with human activities in East Asia and beyond. Through detailed diatom analyses and stratigraphic investigations, his work provides high-resolution reconstructions of paleoenvironmental dynamics and natural hazard histories, contributing to a deeper understanding of long-term climate variability and its relevance to present-day environmental change.

 

 

 

 

Dr. Abdur Rahman (Assistant Research Fellow)圖片

Dr. Abdur Rahman (Assistant Research Fellow)

He is originally from Uttar Pradesh, India. He completed his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Geology at Aligarh Muslim University and later moved to the Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad, India, where he pursued Earth Sciences. Subsequently, he joined the CCU Paleoenvironment Lab at National Chung Cheng University, Chiayi, Taiwan, where he is currently working as an Assistant Research Fellow.  

He is a stable isotope geochemist specializing in paleoenvironmental reconstruction, with particular research interests in climate–fire–vegetation–human interactions and black carbon dynamics. His research focuses on lake and marine sedimentary archives from Taiwan, the Himalaya, and surrounding regions to investigate past fire activity, vegetation dynamics, and hydroclimatic variability. By integrating black carbon records with stable isotope geochemistry and other paleoenvironmental indicators, his work aims to reconstruct changes in fire regimes and their links to climate variability, ecosystem responses, and moisture availability. This research provides insights into the complex interactions among climate, fire, vegetation, and human influences across different temporal and spatial scales.

 

Ranjan Kumar Mohanty (Ph.D. student)圖片

Ranjan Kumar Mohanty (Ph.D. student)

He is from Keonjhar, Odisha, India, a region known for its ancient hills and mineral-rich geological heritage, including some of the oldest rock formations on Earth. He is currently a PhD researcher in the Paleoclimate Lab at National Chung Cheng University (CCU), Taiwan. He completed his Bachelor’s degree at Utkal University, Odisha, and his Master’s degree in Geology at Annamalai University, Tamil Nadu. Prior to joining CCU, he worked as a Project–Junior Research Fellow at the Physical Research Laboratory (PRL), Ahmedabad, supported by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India.

His research specializes in geochemistry, with a focus on paleoclimate reconstruction and biogeochemistry. He has experience in radiocarbon measurements, graphitization techniques, and stable isotope analysis. His earlier work investigated soil carbon dynamics in tropical forest ecosystems using soil and soil-air measurements. In his PhD research, he focuses on East and Southeast Asia, examining long-term interactions among climate variability, ecosystems, and human activity. Using terrestrial and marine sediment archives integrated with stable isotope geochemistry and multiple environmental and biological proxies, his work reconstructs past climate extremes and surface biogeochemical processes. A key component of his research is black carbon analysis, which provides insights into past fire activity, biomass burning, and land-use change. He also integrates pollen and diatom records to reconstruct vegetation dynamics, hydroclimatic variability, and ecosystem responses over time.

 

Kuan-Hua Li (李冠樺) 

  • Second-year graduate student
  • KUEP 2026
  • Study site: South part of Taiwan
  • Pollen、Black carbon、TOC、TN、δC13

 

Ming-Hsien Tsai(蔡名憲) 

  • A second-year graduate student
  • Major in paleoenvironmental reconstruction
  • Ostracod
     

Ho Yi-Chen (何宜蓁) 

  • First year graduate student
  • Study site: Tian pond, Sun-Moon Lake
  • Diatoms

Jo-Lin Lai (賴若琳) 

I am a second-year master’s student. My current work mainly examines past environmental and climate change trends, and explores the relationships among different environmental signals. My research focuses on the mountainous areas of northern Taiwan. I use multiple proxy records, including pollen, black carbon, isotopes, and magnetic susceptibility.

 

Sin-Ying Lee (李炘穎)

  • A third-year undergraduate student
  • Study site: Dapeng Bay
  • Ostracod

 

Chia-Wei Liang (梁珈瑋) 

I’m a third-year undergraduate student. My research focuses on observing the diatom records in sediment cores (MHL-09-01) from Meihua Lake in Yilan.

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