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Zhibao Dong Professor | Dean Tel: 029-85310528 E-mail: zbdong@snnu.edu.cn |
EDUCATION
BA, Shaanxi Normal University, 1988
MS, Lanzhon Institute of Desert Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1991
PhD, Lanzhon Institute of Desert Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 1995
RESEARCH INTERESTS
Aeolian geomorphology, Sediment transport, Physics of blown sand
SELECTED ten PUBLICATIONS
1. Zhibao Dong, Guangyin Hu, Guangqiang Qian, et al., 2017. High-altitude aeolian research on the Tibetan Plateau, Reviews of Geophysics, 55(9):1-38.
2. Zhibao Dong, Ping Lü, ZhengCai Zhang, et al., 2014. Aeolian transport over a developing transverse dune, Journal of Arid Land, 6(3):243-254.
3. Zhibao Dong, Guangqiang Qian, Ping Lü, et al., 2013. Investigation of the sand sea with the tallest dunes on Earth: China’s Badain Jaran Sand Sea. Earth Science Reviews, 120: 20-39.
4. Zhibao Dong, Ping Lü, ZhengCai Zhang, et al., 2012. Aeolian transport in the field: a comparison of different surface treatments, Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 117, D09210. DOI: 10.1029/2012JD017538.
5. Zhibao Dong, Ping Lü, Junfeng Lu, et al., 2012. Geomorphology and origin of Yardangs in the Kumtagh Desert, Northwest China, Geomorphology, 139-140: 145-154.
6. Zhibao Dong, Zhengcai Zhang, Ping Lü, et al., 2012. Analysis of the wind regime in context of dune geomorphology for the Kumtagh Desert, Northwest China. Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie, 56(4): 459-475.
7. Zhibao Dong, Ping Lü, Guangqiang Qian, et al., 2012. Research progress in China’s Lop Nur, Earth Science Reviews, 111: 142-153.
8. Zhibao Dong, Junfeng Lu, Duoqing Man,et al., 2011. Equations for the near-surface mass-flux density profile of wind-blown sediments, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 36: 1292-1299.
9. Zhibao Dong, Zhengcai Zhang, Guangqiang Qian, 2011. An aeolian transport model for flat shifting sand fields under dynamic-limiting conditions, Journal of Arid Environments, 75: 865-869.
10. Zhibao Dong, Duoqing Man, Wanyin Luo, et al., 2010. Horizontal aeolian sediment flux in the Minqin area, a major source of Chinese dust storms, Geomorphology, 116: 58-66.