I studied under Professor Tetsuo Kobayashi and Professor Kisei Kinoshita, who despite my unfamiliarity of Japanese culture, soon made me feel at home and proved to be wonderful mentors throughout my stay. Thanks to their guidance, not only was I able to collaborate with scientists from other universities and local authorities, but also visit places that even most Japanese people have never been. Perhaps Mt. Fuji is the first thing people think of with regards to Japanese mountains, but my fieldwork took me to remote volcanoes as far away as Miyakejima (an island south of Tokyo) and Io-Torishima (northern Okinawa). Indeed, it has been a privilege to learn so much about Sakurajima (a volcano I could observe from my own apartment) and the other volcanoes of Kagoshima.
However, my experience was not confined to my research activities. The opportunity to learn Japanese is probably one of the big selling points of the scholarship.
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