About
Pete Langdon is a Professor of Quaternary science and has recently held the position of Head of School of Geography and Environmental Science at Southampton (2017-2021). He is currently Associate Editor for Quaternary Research, and INQUA HABCOM commission Vice-President. Previously he has served as the Publications Secretary and then Honorary Secretary of the Quaternary Research Association.
Research
Research groups
Research interests
- Climate-environment-human interactions
- Freshwater ecosystem resilience and functioning
- Tipping points in the environment
- South Pacific palaeoclimate and environmental history
- Arctic climate change and biogeochemical cycling
Current research
The Quaternary is a period of time in which extraordinary changes took place, including large scale climate change, and associated ecosystem responses. My research interests are based around understanding such changes, over timescales from millennia to historical, and typically involve reconstructing environmental change from sedimentary deposits (lake or peat sediments). I use many different tools, from fossils to geochemistry and molecular approaches, and have co-authored the definitive guide to using subfossil chironomids (non-biting midges) for environmental reconstruction. I have worked on sediment sequences from every continent bar Antarctica, and tackled major research projects working on reconstructing past climate change, lake pollution and health, human-climate inter-relationships, and advanced the understanding of ecosystem tipping points. Beyond these palaeoenvironmental research interersts, I am increasingly focused on working across disciplines to tackle the challenges of the 21st century.
Research projects
Active projects
Completed projects
Publications
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Teaching
I very much enjoy working with our students to help them be the best that they can. I mainly teach across the physical geography and environmental sciences degrees, teaching in the classroom, laboratory and field.
External roles and responsibilities
Biography
Professor Peter Langdon has >20 years of working with lake sediments and ecosystems across the world. Over the last 15+ years he has increasingly focused on freshwater ecosystem responses and resilience to multidimensional drivers, and linking palaeolimnology with contemporary limnology. He has, with colleagues, developed a series of novel metrics based on system structures and networks by which to measure freshwater system resilience, over time, across spatially variable pollution and related drivers, and in the face of climate change. He uses a range of techniques to reconstruct environmental-human interactions, from microfossils, to stable isotopes, and molecular approaches (e.g. sedimentary DNA). He has published >100 papers in international journals and worked on a wide variety of grants from both national and international funding agencies.
Within the University of Southampton, he has made a number of significant contributions to the reputation and strategic aims of the University by successfully delivering a number of significant roles. These have included Director of Admissions (2006-2012), Director of Programmes (2013-2016), Impact Champion (2016-2017) and Head of School (2017-2021). Most recently he has Chaired the University fieldwork group, which has oversight on field activities across the institution.
Education
BSc (Geography and Geology) Leeds 1994
MSc (Climate Change) UEA 1996
PhD (Reconstructing Holocene climate change in Scotland utilising peat stratigraphy and tephrochronology) Southampton 1999
Employment
2006-date University of Southampton
2000-2006 University of Exeter
1999-2000 University of Southampton (PDRA)
Web of Science research profile
Google Scholar research profile
Prizes
- SUSU Excellence in Teaching Award: Faculty winner for Best Feedback and won the Highly Commended award across the University (2014)