Professor Jonathan Holmes
Environmental Change Research Centre
Department of Geography
University College LondonGower Street
London WC1E 6BT
UK
Room 211, North West Wing
Tel. +44 20 7679 0559
E-Mail j.holmes@ucl.ac.uk
Academic Support for exams
Office hours are available in term 3 for exams advice and support for modules that I teach: click below to arrange a slot:
FACE-TO-FACE Office hours for exams/revision support: Tuesdays and Thursdays 1000-1100 and 1400-1500
Personal tutees
If I am your personal tutor and you would like to meet during the exams period, please email me to arrange a time.
Biography
Jonathan was educated at Honley High School, West Yorkshire, and Hertford College, Oxford. From 1988 to 2000 he was Lecturer/Senior Lecturer and then Reader in Geography at Kingston University. He came to UCL as research director of the Environmental Change Research Centre (ECRC) and Reader in Environmental Change in 2000. He is currently Professor of Physical Geography and director of ECRC.
Recent Publications (past 5 years)
2022
2021
2020
Palmer, S.E., Burn, M.J. & Holmes, J. (2020) A multiproxy analysis of extreme wave deposits in a tropical coastal lagoon in Jamaica, West Indies. Natural Hazards doi.org/10.1007/s11069-020-04284-2
Holmes, JA., Leuenberger, M, Molloy, K. O'Connell, M. (2020) Younger Dryas and Holocene environmental change at the Atlantic fringe of Europe derived from lake-sediment stable-isotope records from western Ireland. Boreas, 49, 233-247.
Roberts, LR, Holmes, JA, Horne, DJ (2020) Tracking the seasonal calcification of Cyprideis torosa (Crustacea, Ostracoda) using Mg/Ca-inferred temperatures, and its implications for palaeotemperature reconstruction. Marine Micropaleontology, 256, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2020.101838.
2019
Sanjuan, J., Alqudahab, M., Neubauer, T. A., Holmes, J. A., Khairallaha, C. (2019) Palaeoenvironmental evolution of the late Miocene palaeolake at Zahle (Bekaa Valley, Lebanon). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 524, 70-84.
2018
van Hardenbroek, M., A. Chakraborty, K.L. Davies, P. Harding, O. Heiri, A.C.G. Henderson, J.A. Holmes, G.E. Lasher, M.J. Leng, V.N. Panizzo, L. Roberts, J. Schilder, C.N. Trueman, M.J. Wooller (2018) The stable isotope composition of organic and inorganic fossils in lake sediment records: Current understanding, challenges, and future directions. Quaternary Science Reviews, 196,154-176.
Bristow, C. S.,Holmes, J. A., Mattey, D., Salzmann, U., Sloane, H. (2018) A late Holocene palaeoenvironmental ‘snapshot’ of the Angamma Delta, Lake Megachad at the end of the African Humid Period, Quaternary Science Reviews, doi10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.04.025
Research
My research is concerned with the reconstruction and understanding of late Pleistocene and Holocene environments, human–climate interactions and data–model comparisons. It falls into three major themes;
- Climate variability in low-latitude regions (Northern Neotropics, North and West Africa, Western China and Central Asia)
- Rapid climate change events across Europe
- Methodological developments in the application of carbonate nonmarine microfossils and microfossil geochemistry to palaeoclimate reconstruction.
Recent Funding
2013-2015 NERC standard grant (NE/K00610X/1) Climate variability over the circum-Caribbean region during the past 1200 years from oxygen-isotope analyses of lake sediments
2012-2014 Royal Society Partnership Grant Detecting Change in Local Ponds
Impact
Outreach activities with schools, colleges and the public
I regularly take part in various outreach activities with school groups from upper-level primary to 6th form. I was organizer of a Southwark Schools ‘Gifted and Talented’ event on environmental microscopy and organizer of, and participant in, OPAL (OPen Air Laboratories)-based aquatic ecology fieldwork with 90 Year 6 children. I regularly give lectures on climate change to various local 6th forms. I have worked with the wider public in the London Science Museum’s ‘Antenna Live’ gallery public engagement event on Sensing the Oceans and its 'Lates' Event on Climate Change
Royal Society Partnership Grant
Detecting changes in local ponds was an exciting project at a junior school in Surrey in which I was the university partner. The project, which ran from 2012 to 2014, was funded by a partnership grant from the Royal Society and designed to give school children the opportunity to take part in a genuine scientific research project. The grant has provided money for lab and field equipment in the school.
Media
I contributed to the BBC World Service Science in Action programme in connection with the drying of the Sahara (May 2008). This work, which was a ‘Perspective’ piece that I wrote for Science, also attracted media attention from the New York Times and various popular science publications. I was interviewed for BBC Breakfast TV in connection with IPCC 4th assessment (2007), BBC Lunchtime news (2007) in connection with the finding that 2006 was the hottest year for Britain on record and on the European heatwave (2017). I acted as consultant for BBC Science and History Programme ‘Superstorm’ and shot video footage in Western China’s drylands in 2006.
Policy
I managed the production of, and contributed to, Water Resources and Sustainable Development in North West China: a case Study of the Minqin Basin a bilingual (English – Mandarin) information brochure for water managers and local government officials in Gansu Province, P. R. China, published in 2002 and was invited participant in UK-Nigeria Bilateral Forum on environmental change, hosted in London in 2000 by the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office and attended by a small group of British and Nigerian government ministers, NGO representatives and academics.
Teaching
PhD Students
Joanna Tindall - Lacustrine carbonate oxygen-isotopes as tracers of past climate change in NW Europe (NERC London DTP studentship, co-supervising with Prof Ian Candy, RHUL)
Committees