
Professor Dan Lunt
M.Phys.(Oxon.), Ph.D.(Reading)
Current positions
Professor of Climate Science
School of Geographical Sciences
Contact
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Biography
I carried out my undergraduate degree (MPhys) in Physics at the University of Oxford (1994-1998), followed by a PhD in Meteorology at the University of Reading (1998-2002). After a postdoc at the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement (LSCE) in Paris, I moved to the School of Geographical Sciences at the University of Bristol in 2003. In 2014 I became Professor of Climate Science. I have been a visiting scientist at Stockholm University, and am currently an Affiliate Scientist at the National Centre for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado.
In 2010 I was awarded the Philip Leverhulme Prize for my work on climate modelling. From 2007-2015 I was the founding and Chief Executive Editor of the journal Geoscientific Model Development (GMD). I lead the international DeepMIP program (www.deepmip.org), and am a Lead Author of Chapter 7 (The Earth’s energy budget, climate feedbacks, and climate sensitivity) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 6th Assessment Report (AR6).
Research interests
My research centres on past climate change, with a focus on (i) understanding how and why climate has changed in the past and (ii) what we can learn about the future from the past. My main tools are climate models, and much of my work is underpinned by model-data comparisons.
(i) The analysis and interpretation of past climate data has led to the formation of many hypotheses regarding the mechanisms affecting past climate change. Models are ideal tools to test these hypotheses. In addition, modelling can itself lead to hypotheses which are testable by the collection and interpretation of new data, and can indicate regions in which new data could usefully be collected.
(ii) Past climate data can also inform our predictions of the future, through providing analogues of future climate change under high carbon dioxide concentrations, and through the evaluation of models used to predict the future.
Both of these aspects are central to the Deep-Time Model Intercomparison Project (DeepMIP), which I lead.
Much of my work focuses on characterising Climate Sensitivity, the globally averaged increase in temperature due to a doubling of carbon dioxide. Associated with this I am a Lead Author on the forthcoming Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sixth assessment report (IPCC AR6).
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
PaleoGradPhan: Paleoclimate meridional and zonal Gradients in the Phanerozoic
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Geographical SciencesDates
01/10/2022 to 30/09/2025
NERC-FAPESP: the Marine Gateways Project - Quantifying the causes and climatic consequences of the opening of the South Atlantic
Principal Investigator
Role
Co-Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Geographical SciencesDates
01/09/2022 to 31/08/2024
Solving the Oligocene icehouse conundrum
Principal Investigator
Role
Co-Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Geographical SciencesDates
01/04/2022 to 31/03/2027
Climate Archive: Earth's climate at your fingertips
Principal Investigator
Role
Principal Investigator
Description
Development of a web application to visualise and analyse paleoclimate data with particular focus on better accessability across the disciplines and the wider public.Managing organisational unit
School of Geographical SciencesDates
01/01/2021 to 30/06/2021
PEN feasibility
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Geographical SciencesDates
15/03/2018
Thesis supervisions
Climatic and oceanic changes across the Eocene-Oligocene Transition
Supervisors
Critically Evaluating The Role of The Deep Subsurface In The Chemical Weathering Thermostat
Supervisors
Modelling the atmospheric mineral dust cycle using a dynamic global vegetation model.
Supervisors
Physical and biogeochemical drivers of Modern carbonate diagenesis in intertidal sediments of Abu Dhabi
Supervisors
Modelling Last Interglacial Stable Water Isotopes in Greenland Ice Cores
Supervisors
Trace gases in glaciated environments
Supervisors
Understanding environmental and anthropogenic factors affecting dinoflagellate communities in the Black and Caspian seas
Supervisors
The effects of changing sea ice conditions on microbial production and community composition in the Barents Sea
Supervisors
Representation of historical climate and extreme indices (1950-2013) by CMIP6 models and future scenarios of climate change in Mexico
Supervisors
Projecting long-term past and future climate change within the context of post-closure performance assessments for disposal of radioactive waste
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
01/06/2023Global and Zonal-Mean Hydrological Response to Early Eocene Warmth
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Unraveling the mechanisms and implications of a stronger mid-Pliocene Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in PlioMIP2
Climate of the Past
African Hydroclimate During the Early Eocene From the DeepMIP Simulations
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Climatic and tectonic drivers shaped the tropical distribution of coral reefs
Nature Communications
Climatic controls on the ecological ascendancy of dinosaurs
Current Biology