Pavel Talalay
Pavel Grigorievich Talalay (Russian: Павел Григорьевич Талалай) (born October 14, 1962), is a Russian professor of drilling engineering and director of the Institute for Polar Science and Engineering in Jilin University, Changchun, China. His research interests are focused on different features of drilling technology in ice and permafrost; dynamics of ice sheets; ice properties and environmental issues in polar regions. CareerTalalay acquired Drilling Engineer (1984), Ph.D. (1995) and Doctor of Engineering (2007) degrees at the Saint Petersburg Mining University of Russia, where he has also worked as Professor and Chair of Department of Descriptive Geometry and Engineering Drawing.[1] Talalay was a guest Researcher in the Niels Bohr University of Copenhagen, Denmark (1998-1999). In 2010, Talalay was invited to work at Jilin University within the framework of the Chinese state program “Attracting 1000 highly qualified specialists”.[2] Later, Talalay became the Director of the Polar Research Center of Jilin University.[3] Since 2009, Talalay is a member of Technical Assistance Board, U.S. NSF Ice Drilling Program (IDP) of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA.[4] In 2023-2024 Prof Talalay was the leader of the Chinese-Russian drilling project to study the in-situ dynamics and conditions at the bed of the Northwestern Princess Elizabeth Land, East Antarctic Ice Sheet.[5] The project succeeded in penetration through the 545 m thick ice and recovered the unique 0.48 m bedrock sample. Talalay is a member of Steering Committee of SCAR Groundwater Action Group.[6] Talalay is the author of over 200 publication, 70 patents, and 19 books and book-chapters, most notable of which are Mechanical Ice Drilling Technology,[7] Thermal Ice Drilling Technology,[8] Geotechnical and Exploration Drilling in the Polar Regions.[9] and Mining and Construction in Snow and Ice.[10] Expeditions in Antarctica and the ArcticTalalay participated in six field expeditions in Antarctica and the Arctic. In 1999-2001 he took part in the North Greenland Ice Core Project (NorthGRIP) yielded the deepest borehole in Greenland ice sheet (3085 m; 2003). He has been a part in a Russian project to create deepest borehole in ice at Vostok Station, Antarctica that contacted in February 2012 with the subglacial Lake Vostok at a depth 3769.3 m. In 2019, Talalay lead a research project that yielded the first bedrock sample beneath East Antarctica, near the Zhongshan Station, in more than 60 years.[11] Awards and recognitionTalalay was awarded the Second-Class Diploma of IV All-Russian context of science-popular articles “Science-Society-2005”,[12] 2006 International Geneva Salon of Inventions Gold Medal, won the 2009 International Contest on 3D-Moldelling. In 2014, he was awarded the Chinese Government's Friendship Award for “outstanding contribution to the country's economic and social progress”. References
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