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Akademisyenler

DemetBiltekin

Assist. Prof. Dr. Demet Biltekin

e.mail: biltekin@itu.edu.tr
phone: +90212 285 61 08
web: https://avesis.itu.edu.tr/biltekin  
researchgate link: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Demet_Biltekin

Research interests:

Palynology (pollen and spores, dinoflagellate), Quaternary palynology, Neogene palynology, vegetation and climate changes, non-pollen palynomorphs (i.e., spores of fungi and algae), archaeobotany

Biography:​

2019    Assistant Professor, ITU Eurasia Institute of Earth Sciences  
2015-2019,    Assistant Professor, Ordu University, Fatsa Faculty of Marine Sciences  
2013-2014,    Post-Doc, The Catalan Institute of Human Paleoecology and Social Evolution (IPHES, Tarragona-Spain)  
2011-2013,    Post-Doc, ITU Eastern Mediterranean Centre for Oceanography and Limnology (EMCOL)  
2006-2012,    PhD, Université Claude Bernard Lyon1 (Lyon, France)  
2000-2003,    MA, Yüksek Lisans, ITU Eurasia Institute of Earth Sciences  
1995-1999,    BA, Kocaeli University, Geological Engineering 

Most important 5 publications:

Biltekin, D., Burjachs, F., Vallverdú, J., Sharp, W.D., Mertz-Kraus, R., Chacón, M.G., Saladié, P., Bischoff, J.L., Carbonell, E., 2019. Vegetation and climate record from Abric Romaní (Capellades, Northeast Iberia) during the Upper Pleistocene (MIS 5d-3). Quaternary Science Reviews 220, 154-164.

Bal Akkoca, D., Eriş, K.K., Çağatay, M.N., Biltekin, D., 2019. The mineralogical and geochemical composition of Holocene sediments from Lake Hazar, Elazığ, Eastern Turkey: implications for weathering, paleoclimate, redox conditions, provenance and tectonic setting. Turkish Journal of Earth Sciences.

Biltekin, D., Eriş, K., Çağatay, N., Akçer Ön, S., Bal Akkoca, D. 2018. Late Pleistocene-Holocene environmental change in eastern Turkey: multiproxy palaeoecological data of vegetation and lake-catchment changes. Journal of Quaternary Science, Volume 33, Issue 5, 575-585.

Biltekin, D., 2018. Palynomorphs from a lacustrine sequence provide evidence for palaeoenvironmental changes during the early Miocene in Central Anatolia, Turkey. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 55(5): 505-513.

Biltekin, D., Popescu, S.-M., Suc, J.-P., Quézel, P., Jiménez-Moreno, G., Yavuz, N., Çagatay, M. N., 2015. Anatolia: a long-time plant refuge area documented by pollen records over the last 23 Million years. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, Volume 215. 1-22, April 2015.

Other publications -->