Cardiff University
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assignment_turned_in Project2008 - 2011Partners:LSGi, HRB, BBT, HGFHELMHOLTZ ASSOCIATION OF GERMAN RESEARCH CENTRE, MINISTERIE VAN ONDERWIJS, CULTUUR EN WETENSCHAP +52 partnersLSGi,HRB,BBT,HGFHELMHOLTZ ASSOCIATION OF GERMAN RESEARCH CENTRE,MINISTERIE VAN ONDERWIJS, CULTUUR EN WETENSCHAP,USMI,EMBL,IARC,UT,Cardiff University,NIPH,USMI,UK Biobank,University of Salamanca,University of Turku,deCODE Genetics (Iceland),Semmelweis University,BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH FOUNDATION, ACADEMY OF ATHENS,MUG,BUNDESMINISTERIUM FUR WISSENSCHAFT UND FORSCHUNG BMWF,BMBF,RANNIS,iPRI,Presidenza Del Consiglio Dei Ministri,VITRO S.A.,Governo Italiano,Uppsala University,WHO,AAU,NTNU,KI,FHG,GENOMA ESPAÑA,ISCIII,FHF,MPG,University of Malta,ERASMUS MC,LUMC,Helmholtz Zentrum München,GENERAL SECRETARIAT FOR RESEARCH AND INNOVATION,THL,NEDERLANDSE FEDERATIE VAN UNIVERSITAIR MEDISCH CENTRA,INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA SANTE ET DE LA RECHERCHE MEDICALE,University of Manchester,UMCG,MRC,ZON,Telethon Foundation,MERIEUX ALLIANCE SA,MMI,ACC,INCA,IPPOSI,LEGAL PATHWAYS BV,CNR,HARIDUS-JA TEADUS MINISTEERIUMFunder: European Commission Project Code: 212111more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications assignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2019Partners:Cardiff UniversityCardiff UniversityFunder: European Commission Project Code: 656381Overall Budget: 267,147 EURFunder Contribution: 267,147 EURDetermining the temporal relationships of large-scale atmospheric and oceanic fluctuations is crucial for advancing understanding of the mechanisms controlling heat transfer between the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. The thermal bipolar see-saw caused asynchronous interhemispheric climatic changes during the last glacial period and Southern Ocean marine records and the Antarctic ice-cores are valuable archives recording this past climatic variability. Ascertaining the precise phasing of the climatic variability between these records provides crucial boundary conditions for testing models simulating the future behaviour of the bipolar see-saw and assessing potential large-scale oceanic and atmospheric reorganisations under anthropogenic forcing. In addition, establishing tighter constraints on phase relationships between sedimentary evidence for deep-water ventilation of CO2, and ice-core evidence for past atmospheric CO2 variations is key to determining the future response of the Earth system to rising CO2 levels. This project will address this challenge by ascertaining the rate, timing and phasing of Southern Hemisphere climatic changes between 40-10 kyr BP using tephrochronology to independently synchronise the palaeoclimatic sequences using common horizons of volcanic ash as time-synchronous tie-lines. Recognition of ash horizons not visible upon core inspection (cryptotephras) within sequences increasingly distal from volcanic regions has increased the scope of this technique. Cryptotephra identification methods will be used to trace ash horizons visible in Antarctic ice-cores into a marine core network from the Southern Ocean Atlantic sector and to trace previously unknown horizons identified in the marine realm into the Antarctic Atlantic sector EPICA DML ice-core. This region has a high potential for synchronisation due to the number of upwind volcanic regions that have previously deposited volcanic ash over the ice-sheet and Southern Ocean.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2010 - 2014Partners:Cardiff University, Halcrow Group Ltd, CARDIFF UNIVERSITY, Halcrow Group Limited, Cardiff UniversityCardiff University,Halcrow Group Ltd,CARDIFF UNIVERSITY,Halcrow Group Limited,Cardiff UniversityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/H018131/1Funder Contribution: 66,945 GBPIn recent years there has been growing concern about the impact of diffuse source pollution on river, estuarine and coastal water quality and particularly with regard to non-compliance of bathing waters. Climate change, and particularly more intense storms in the bathing season, has led to increased compliance failure of bathing waters, e.g. last summer saw widely publicised beach failure occurrences at Amroth and Rhyl. Hydro-environmental impact assessment modelling studies, regularly undertaken by specialist consulting environmental companies, are generally regarded as having two fundamental shortcomings in model simulations, which can lead to erromneous environmental impact assessment outcomes. These shortcomings will be addressed in this project and include: (i) improving the computational linking of catchment, river and estuarine-coastal models to ensure momentum and mass conservation across the link boundary, and (ii) improving the kinetic decay process representation in deterministic models, to include the impact of salinity, irradiance, turbidity and suspended sediment levels. The main aim of this research project will therefore be to develop and validate linked hydro-environmental deterministic models to predict improved fluxes and concentration levels of faecal bacterial from catchment to coast, using dynamic decay rates related to a range of primary variables. This main objective will be achieved by: (i) setting up linked catchment, river and estuary-coastal models to predict flow and solute transport processes from Cloud to Coast; (ii) linking these models through an Open MI system and refining the link to include momentum conservation; (iii) extending the Cardiff Research Centre's Severn and Ribble river basin models to include catchments, (iv) developing and testing the Severn model against scaled laboratory model data for conservative tracer measurements, obtained using an idealised catchment-river-estuary physical model at Cardiff University, (v) undertaking a detailed analysis of earlier field studies (undertaken by the main supervisor and Professor David Kay, Aberystwyth) on the impact of turbidity and sediment adsorption on bacterial levels in the Severn estuary, with the aim of developing new formulations linking bacterial concentration levels with: salinity, irradiance, turbidity and suspended sediment), (vi) including the new formulations for bacterial decay (in the form of T90 values) in the linked models for river and estuary-coastal systems and to investigate the sensitivity of the receiving water concentration levels to these parameters, and (vii) studying briefly the effects of various renewable energy structures in the Severn estuary (including the Severn Barrage) on the receiving water faecal bacterial levels, particularly in terms of establishing the impact of the new linking methodology and the dynamic decay rates on the predicted concentration levels. The outcomes from this study will be published in journal and conference papers and presented in talks and lectures on the Centre's activities relating to marine renewable energy and particularly for the Severn estuary.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2025Partners:Cardiff University, CARDIFF UNIVERSITY, Cardiff UniversityCardiff University,CARDIFF UNIVERSITY,Cardiff UniversityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: 2603677This project aims to explore secondary data created from recent UK legislation which requires organisations to publish their Gender Pay Gap (GPG) to understand the determinants of the UK GPG among companies. It will build on international literature relating to the GPG and apply well-established econometric methods for panel data.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2009 - 2014Partners:Cardiff UniversityCardiff UniversityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: G0802128Funder Contribution: 2,144,990 GBPMisuse of alcohol, tobacco and illegal drugs by young people impacts on their health in the short and long term, and is also associated with anti-social behaviour, crime and drop out from school. Many risk and protective factors for substance misuse in young people are located in the family. The Strengthening Families 10-14 UK programme aims to strengthen areas of family life that protect against substance misuse (parenting, communication, and young people?s resilience skills). The study will identify whether the programme delays or reduces substance use, and collect information that will help in wider implementation of the programme if successful.
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