Daniel Parsons
Daniel Roy Parsons is the Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Research and Innovation at
Loughborough University and holds the Personal Title of Professor in Geosciences. He was the founding Director of the Energy and Environment Institute (2017–2022) and a professor of
process sedimentology at the
University of Hull from 2011 to 2022. He is also a visiting professor at the
University of Illinois (USA) and
Can Tho University (Vietnam). He obtained his PhD at the
University of Sheffield in 2004. Parsons is known for his work on flow processes and
sediment transport in rivers, coasts and estuaries, and the deep sea. This includes work addressing
flood hazard and risk, as well as internationally leading work detailing
turbidity currents and associated hazards in the deep sea. Parsons also researches the leakage and transport of
plastics in rivers, coasts and estuaries and as part of the Huxley debate at the 2018
British Science Festival he claimed that the most significant marker for the
Anthropocene age may be the fossilisation of plastic debris such as formed in
plastiglomerate. Parsons is currently a member of the
Natural Environment Research Council Research Committee. Parsons has recently completed a major research programme funded via a
European Research Council Consolidator Award exploring the evolution of stickiness and its impact of morphodynamic and sedimentary processes. He is presently President of Division for Geomorphology of the
European Geosciences Union and a Commissioner on the [https://yorksandhumberclimate.org.uk/ Yorkshire and Humber Climate Commission], chairing the Research and Evidence Panel.
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