Professor Yani Najman

Professor of Tectonics

Research Overview

Research:

I am interested in using the detrital record as an archive of paleotectonics, climate and erosion. I utilise emerging and established provenance techniques, in particular isotopic fingerprinting and detrital thermochronology, to advance the detrital approach and apply it to novel geological problems. In orogenic settings, my work is focused on the Himalaya, Tibet and Pamir. Here I use the sedimentary archive of material eroded from the mountain belt and preserved in adjacent sedimentary basins to better understand the inter-relationship between tectonics, erosion and sedimentation, to reconstruct hinterland tectonics and investigate mountain-building processes, and to constrain the proposed influence of Himalayan erosion on global climate and ocean geochemistry. My recent work extends the detrital approach to extensional settings, where I am determining the provenance of the Nile delta in order to reconstruct its palaeodrainage, and the relationship between its hydrology, rift tectonics, and ocean-atmosphere interactions.

Please see my web page for more details of my research:

Teaching:

I teach on the following undergraduate courses:

  • Geological methods
  • Environmental field course
  • Practical geographical skills
  • Environmental issues for the 21st century

Roles:

  • Director of Studies for the / .
  • LEC liaison for student societies Envirosoc, Ecosoc, Biolsoc and SLUGS (Geography).
  • Administrator for LEC’s “ for students’ personal extra-curricular activities.
  • Theme leader for the Earth Science Research Group


14/02/2024 → 31/01/2028
Research


01/10/2022 → 21/07/2026
Research


01/03/2019 → 31/07/2021
Research


01/01/2013 → 30/06/2017
Research


01/10/2011 → 30/09/2015
Research


01/09/2009 → 30/06/2013
Research


13/07/2008 → 24/07/2008
Research


01/11/2005 → 31/03/2010
Other

  • Earth Science
  • Understanding a changing planet