
Member Since 2002
Li Li
Professor, Pennsylvania State University Main Campus
Member, Horton Medal Committee; Member, Hydrology Witherspoon Lecture Committee; Associate Editor, Global Biogeochemical Cycles
Dr. Li Li (李黎) is the Barry and Shirley Isett professor in the Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering at Penn State University. Her research focuses on questions at the intersections of hydrology, biogeochemistry, ecology, + environmental engineering. She earned her PhD in environmental engineering + water resources from Princeton University, and MSc and BSc in environmental chemistry from Nanjing University, China. Before joining Penn State, she worked at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab.
Professional Experience
Pennsylvania State University Main Campus
Professor
2020 - Present
Pennsylvania State University Main Campus
Associate professpr
2015 - 2020
Pennsylvania State University Main Campus
Assistant Professor
2009 - 2015
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Education
Princeton University
Doctorate
2005
Honors & Awards
Joanne Simpson Medal
Received December 2024
Citation
Dr. Li Li is the Barry and Shirley Isett Professor in Civil and Environmental Engineering at Penn State University. She has pioneered the use of big data, machine learning and reactive transport models to deepen our understanding of Earth's surface and subsurface processes, especially concerning water quality in a changing climate, from watershed to continental scales. Her scientific journey is distinguished by insightful work and prolific publication, with over 109 journal articles, including 20 in AGU journals and notable papers in Nature Water and Nature Climate Change. This is particularly notable in the context of academia's demographic landscape in the Western world, where faculty women of color have remained strikingly scarce.
Dr. Li is known for her innovations in reactive transport modeling and, specifically, adapting them from their traditional applications in the field of contaminant transport and hydrogeology to elucidate the intricate interplay between climate, weather, land use and river water quality. For instance, Dr Li’s team developed the “shallow and deep hypothesis,” which has revealed how riverine water chemistry is linked to watershed subsurface structures, advancing a mechanistic understanding of riverine water quality and providing a new framework for scientific inquiry. Dr. Li’s work on river water quality has reshaped our understanding of water quality response to climate change. Harnessing cutting-edge deep learning tools, she developed continental-scale models to show the dominant control of temperature on dissolved oxygen levels. Her work also highlighted the unexpected, widespread deoxygenation in warming rivers at rates surpassing that of oceans.
Beyond her research, Dr. Li is committed to fostering a diverse, equitable and inclusive scientific community, with a particular emphasis on supporting women scientists. In 2021, she co-founded the global monthly seminar Women Advancing River Research with Ellen Wohl. This platform, now well established within the hydrology, geomorphology and biogeochemistry communities, has featured over 100 women scientists across five continents.
—Nandita Basu
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
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Union Fellow
Received December 2024
Paul A. Witherspoon Lecture
Received December 2024
AGU Abstracts
Hydrology outweighs temperature in driving production and export of dissolved carbon in a snowy mountain catchment
CATCHMENT AND CRITICAL ZONE SCIENCE: UNDERSTANDING ECOSYSTEMS THROUGH MONITORING, ANALYSIS, AND EXPERIMENTATION III POSTER
hydrology | 13 december 2024
Devon Kerins, Kayalvizhi Sadayappan, Wei Zhi, Pame...
Terrestrial production and export of dissolved organic and inorganic carbon (DOC and DIC) to streams depends on water flow and biogeochemical processe...
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Changing Water Chemistry and Biogeochemical Reactions in a Warming Mountain Watershed
CATCHMENT AND CRITICAL ZONE SCIENCE: UNDERSTANDING ECOSYSTEMS THROUGH MONITORING, ANALYSIS, AND EXPERIMENTATION III POSTER
hydrology | 13 december 2024
Abigail Knapp, Holly R. Barnard, John F. Knowles, ...
Mountain watersheds in the western U.S. are warming more rapidly than lower elevations, which is known to reduce snow accumulation and often reduce st...
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Diverging Streamflow and Precipitation Trends in the Contiguous US
BIG DATA IN THE CRITICAL ZONE: DECIPHERING CONTROLS ON HYDROBIOGEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES ACROSS SCALES POSTER
hydrology | 13 december 2024
Matthew Berzonsky, Kayalvizhi Sadayappan, Valerie ...
Climate change has caused varied long-term changes in river discharge. Although precipitation is often considered as primarily driving discharge, some...
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Volunteer Experience
2025 - 2027
Member
Hydrology Witherspoon Lecture Committee
2022 - 2026
Associate Editor
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
2024 - 2025
Member
Horton Medal Committee