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When
11 March 2026
13:00 to 15:00
Where

Aðalbygging

The Aula

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    Live stream

    Doctoral defence in Geology:
    Ahmed Hamdi Abdrabou Moghazi

    Doctoral candidate:
    Ahmed Hamdi Abdrabou Moghazi

    Title of thesis:
    Early Pleistocene environment and climate of the Nihewan Basin, NE China

    Opponents:
    Dr. Jonathan Holmes, Professor of Physical Geography, University College London, UK
    Dr. Christopher J. Bae, Professor of Anthropology, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, USA

    Advisor:
    Dr. Steffen Mischke, Professor at the Faculty of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland

    Other members of the doctoral committee:
    Dr. Ívar Örn Benediktsson, Research Professor at the Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland
    Dr. Þorsteinn Þorsteinsson, Icelandic Meteorological Office

    Chair of Ceremony:
    Dr. Andri Stefánsson, Professor and Head of the Faculty of Earth Sciences, University of Iceland

    Abstract:
    The Nihewan Basin in northern China preserves abundant Early Pleistocene Palaeolithic sites and represents one of the earliest locations of hominins outside Africa. Sediments from three excavation trenches at the Dachangliang ridge in the northeastern part of the Nihewan Basin were investigated in the PhD study to reconstruct the environmental and climatic changes and assess their relationship with hominin activities during the Early Pleistocene. A multi-proxy approach was applied, integrating field-based observations with grain-size, magnetic susceptibility and ostracod assemblage (bivalved micro-crustacean) analyses, as well as parameterized grain-size end-member modeling, cyclostratigraphic analysis and stable isotope analysis of ostracod shells ( δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C values). The studied sediments were mostly interpreted as fluvially reworked, originally aeolian deposits which accumulated through six depositional cycles, alternating between dominantly a wetland with periods of lake and alluvial plain settings. The grain-size distributions of the synthetic NH-T composite section were attributed to a mixture of four distinct end members (EMs 1-4). EMs 1-3 were used to infer the history of East Asian winter/summer monsoons (EAWM/EASM) in the region. Inferred EASM conditions dominated during periods from ca. 1.66-1.62 Ma, 1.52-1.25 Ma and after 0.82 Ma, whereas EAWM conditions prevailed from ca. 1.62-1.52 Ma and during the Mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT) 1.25-0.82 Ma. The unexpectedly high δ¹⁸O-δ¹³C covariance suggests that the basin was mostly hydrologically closed, and waters affected by evaporation. Hydrological state shifts between more standing and flowing waters were detected. Assessed together with the synthetic archaeological record, hominins apparently occupied the basin during periods of prevailing EASM climate and more standing waters. Collectively, these insights refine our current perspectives of the favorable and less favorable climatic conditions that shaped the Early Pleistocene hominin activities in the region. Thus, this study establishes a foundation for continued research on the palaeoenvironments of Early Pleistocene hominins in East Asia.

    About the doctoral candidate:
    Ahmed was born in 1992 in Aswan, Egypt. He received his Bachelor’s degree in Geology in 2013 from Aswan University, Egypt, and his Master’s degree in Petroleum Geoengineering in 2019 from the University of Miskolc, Hungary. Between 2014 and 2017, and again from 2019 to 2021, he worked as a Teaching and Research Assistant in the Department of Geology at Aswan University. During the summers of 2018 and 2019, he completed research internships at the GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany. In February 2021, he began his PhD in Geology after receiving an offer for a doctoral position from Professor Steffen Mischke. In addition to his doctoral studies, Ahmed has taught part-time at the University of Iceland.

    Stream on Zoom:
    https://eu01web.zoom.us/j/69416792652

     

    Doctoral Defensein Geology - Ahmed Hamdi Abdrabou Moghazi
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    Buses 14, 1, 6, 3 and 12 stop at the University of Iceland in Vatnsmýri. Buses 11 and 15 also stop nearby. Let's travel in an ecological way!

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