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We’re excited to share that we are recruiting an MSc student to work on snowmelt–groundwater dynamics in mountain headwaters, starting May or September 2026.
The project will combine field instrumentation in the Castle region (Southern Alberta) with hydrological modelling to understand how snowmelt contributes to groundwater recharge and seasonal water availability under a changing climate. This is a great opportunity for a student interested in mountain hydrology, cryosphere processes, and climate impacts, with opportunities for both fieldwork and modelling development. Key details
See poster below and here for more details.
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We are pleased to announce a fully funded PhD position starting September 2026 at the Mountain Ice & Water Lab (University of Lethbridge), focusing on groundwater dynamics in the proglacial zone of Peyto Glacier.
This project investigates how meltwater from snow and glacial ice infiltrates evolving proglacial landscapes and contributes to groundwater storage and streamflow. The work combines field monitoring in glacier forefields with process-based hydrological and 3D groundwater modelling, offering a unique opportunity to study emerging hydrological systems in newly deglaciated terrain. Position Highlights
Full project description and application instructions are available in the poster below and here Informal enquiries and early expressions of interest are encouraged by mid-January 2026. If you're interested in mountain hydrology, subsurface processes, or cryosphere–climate interactions and excited to join a collaborative research team, we’d love to hear from you. We’re excited to announce the official launch of the Mountain Ice & Water Lab at the University of Lethbridge!
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