Assist. Prof. Dr. Hüseyin Sendir | Earth Sciences | Best Researcher Award
Asst. Prof. Dr., Eskişehir Osmangazi University, Turkey
Dr. Hüseyin Sendir is an Assistant Professor of Geological Engineering at Eskişehir Osmangazi University, Turkey, with a Ph.D. (2009) in Geological Engineering from the same institution. His early career research focused on rock mechanics, landslide risk, and structural geology, as reflected in high‑impact papers such as his widely cited 2002 study on gypsum strength correlations. Over two decades his scholarship expanded into mineral deposit geology, isotopic geochemistry, and even planetary mining studies. He serves in multiple academic and quality commissions at his university, and currently holds leadership roles including Deputy Head of Department.
Professional Profile
Scopus | Google Scholar | ORCID
Education
Dr. Sendir completed his Bachelor of Engineering in Geological Engineering at Sivas Cumhuriyet University (1995–1999), followed by two Master’s degrees: at Cumhuriyet University (1999–2001) and at Eskişehir Osmangazi University (2001–2004), both thesis‑based in Geological Engineering. He earned his Ph.D. from Eskişehir Osmangazi University’s Institute of Science (2004–2009), specializing in geological engineering. His doctoral research investigated rock mechanics, geomechanical behavior, and field‑based measurements, which underpinned his later contributions to landslide analysis and compressive strength modeling. His formal academic training blends engineering fundamentals, field geology, and advanced isotopic and mineralogical methods.
Experience
Since completing his doctorate in 2009, Dr. Sendir has served as faculty in the Department of Geological Engineering at Eskişehir Osmangazi University. He was Head of Department from 2015 to 2016, again 2017–2022, and since 2023 has been Deputy Head. He is regularly a member of academic, quality‑assurance and accreditation commissions affiliated with the university and faculty—including roles in curriculum development and stakeholder engagement. In 2025 he also joined the Department Academic Incentive Evaluation Commission. His administrative service reflects sustained leadership in shaping educational quality and academic policy within the engineering faculty. Simultaneously, he taught postgraduate and doctoral courses in topics such as isotope geology and rare earth elements, supervising master’s theses and contributing to the academic development of the department.
Research Focus
Dr. Sendir’s research spans applied geological engineering, mineral deposit geology, isotope geochemistry, and emerging frontiers like planetary mining. His early landmark work established empirical correlations between Schmidt hammer rebound indices and rock mechanical properties (UCS, Young’s modulus) in gypsum—widely cited and used as a benchmark in rock mechanics. He has contributed to the geomorphological and geomechanical analysis of landslides in the North Anatolian Fault Zone. More recent work explores chromium and manganese deposits in Türkiye, Eocene granitoid magmatism and tectono‑magmatic evolution in NW Anatolia, and geochemical and isotopic controls on gold, copper‑molybdenum‑tungsten‑gold systems in porphyry‑skarn complexes. His research is deeply interdisciplinary, blending fieldwork, petrography, isotopic dating, and geochemistry, with growing interest in extraplanetary resource environments like lunar and Martian mining. He positions geological engineering at the intersection of energy, resources, and environmental resilience.
Publication Top Notes
-
Yılmaz I, Sendir H. Correlation of Schmidt hardness with unconfined compressive strength and Young’s modulus in gypsum from Sivas (Turkey). Engineering Geology 66 (3–4): 211–219 (2002).
-
This empirical study developed regression relationships between Schmidt rebound values and mechanical properties of gypsum, providing fast, field‑based strength estimation tools for engineering geology; the work has been cited hundreds of times ResearchGate.
-
-
Sendir H, Yılmaz I. Structural, geomorphological and geomechanical aspects of the Koyulhisar landslides in the North Anatolian Fault Zone (Sivas, Turkey). Environmental Geology 42(1): 52–60 (2002).
-
Investigated the 1998–2000 landslides through joint structural mapping, slope stability criteria (SMR/RMR), rainfall data and geomorphology; demonstrated the influence of faulting, steep topography and heavy precipitation on landslide activation ResearchGate.
-
-
Sendir H. Arifler (Domaniç, Kütahya) yöresi manganöz cevherleşmesinin jeolojik özellikleri. Eskişehir Osmangazi Üniversitesi Mühendislik ve Mimarlık Fakültesi Dergisi (2020).
-
Documented geological setting, stratigraphy, and mineralization of manganese deposits hosted in Cretaceous mélange units near Domaniç, offering regional insights into ultramafic‑hosted ore systems avesis.ogu.edu.tr+2ResearchGate+2DergiPark+2.
-
-
Sendir H, Yasin D, Karabacak V. Jeoloji Mühendisliği Güncel Çalışma Alanları. Eskişehir Osmangazi Üniversitesi Mühendislik ve Mimarlık Fakültesi Dergisi, 31(4): 1087–1093 (Dec 2023).
-
A comprehensive review of historical and contemporary research directions in geological engineering in Türkiye, covering educational developments, research themes and future horizons avesis.ogu.edu.tr+2DergiPark+2ResearchGate+2.
-
-
Kocatürk H, Kumral M, Creaser RA, Dufrane SA, Ünlüer AT, Sendir H, et al. Magmatic Redox Evolution and Porphyry–Skarn Transition in Multiphase Cu‑Mo‑W‑Au Systems of the Eocene Tavşanlı Belt, NW Türkiye. Minerals 15(8):792 (2025).
-
Employing field mapping, whole‑rock geochemistry, Re–Os molybdenite dating and mineral chemistry, this open‑access article explains magmatic controls on porphyry to skarn mineralization across four mineralized zones in the Nilüfer complex mdpi.com+1ResearchGate+1.
-
-
Umucu Y, Ünal N, Deniz V, Gürsoy YH, Sendir H. Investigation of ball mill optimization based on kinetic model and separator particle‑size separation. Physicochemical Problems of Mineral Processing (2025).
-
Presented a kinetic breakage model linking mill capacity, shaft power, and particle size distribution; suggests operational relationships to improve energy efficiency in dry ball‑mill grinding circuits
-
Conclusion
Overall, Asst. Prof. Hüseyin Sendir’s longstanding commitment to academic service, teaching excellence, and research — particularly his early, highly cited geotechnical studies and recent ventures into cutting-edge areas like extraterrestrial mining — illustrate a dynamic and evolving academic trajectory. Given his contributions to both scientific knowledge and institutional development, he is a strong candidate for the Best Researcher Award, and recognition at this stage would both honor his past work and encourage further high-impact contributions in the years ahead.