Xudong Fu

2018-05-18 11:07

INFORMATION

Name

Xudong    Fu

Title

Lecturer

Phone


Position


Email

xdfu@henu.edu.cn;   xdhz_fu@163.com


EDUCATION

Ph.D. 2009, Plant Ecology. Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China. 

M.S. 2004, Quaternary Geology. Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.

B.S. 2000, Physical Geography. Department of Geography, Shaanxi Normal University, Xi’an, China


EMPLOYMENT

2009.09-present, Lecturer in Physical Geography, Associate Professor, College of Environment and Planning, Henan University, Kaifeng, China 

2004.08-2006.06. Assistant editor, Journal of the Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences.


MAIN COURSES

Plant Geography


RESEARCH INTERESTS

Sedimentology and Geochemistry of Eolian Sediments; Plant Ecology in the Arid and Semi-arid Land; Stable Isotopic Geochemistry.


SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

1. Fu X D. 2017. Characteristics of oxygen isotopic compositions of quartz in the Badain Jaran Desert and its implications for sand provenances. Acta Sedimentlogica Sinica, 35(6):67~74.

2. Fu X D, Zhou G S, Zhang X S. 2016. Color variations of the paleosol-sand profiles across Otindag Sandy Land and its paleoclimatic implications. Acta Sedimentlogica Sinica, 33(6):70~78.

3. Fu X D, Wang Y S. 2015. Provenance studies of Chinese deserts: review and outlook. Acta Sedimentlogica Sinica, 33(6):1063~1073.

4. Fu X D, Yang X P. 2004. Preliminary measurement and analysis of quartz δ18O of northern deserts in China. Quaternary Sciences, 24(2): 243.

5. Zhang F, Fu X D. 2016. Relationships between oxygen isotope compositions of quartz and grain size from dune sands and fluvial-lacustrine sediments in the Taklimakan desert. Geological Reviews, 62(1): 73~82.

6. Tong H B, Fu X D, Chen J S. 2013. A panel model of isotope concentration-flow coupled field in ground water systems. Journal of Chongqing University, 36(1): 145~150.

7. Yang X P, Zhang F, Fu X D, Wang X M. 2008.Oxygen isotopic compositions of quartz in the sand seas and sandy lands of northern China and their implications for understanding the provenances of aeolian sands. Geomorphology, 102: 278~285.