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X-WR-CALNAME:GEOTRACES
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.geotraces.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for GEOTRACES
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TZID:Europe/Paris
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20140330T010000
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DTSTART:20141026T010000
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20150329T010000
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DTSTART:20151025T010000
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20160327T010000
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TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20161030T010000
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END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151117
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151119
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20151201T152945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20151201T152945Z
UID:1986-1447718400-1447891199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:EU-Brazil Atlantic Ocean Research Cooperation
DESCRIPTION:EU-Brazil Atlantic Ocean Research CooperationDates: 17-18 November 2015Location: Rio de Janeiro\, Brazil \nThe provisional programme is available to download.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/eu-brazil-atlantic-ocean-research-cooperation/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151108
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151114
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150615T094140Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150615T094140Z
UID:1958-1446940800-1447459199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:US GEOTRACES Pacific cruise (GP16) data workshop
DESCRIPTION:US GEOTRACES Pacific cruise (GP16) data workshop Dates: 8 – 13 November 2015Location: University of Southern California’s Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies\, Catalina Island\, USA.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/us-geotraces-pacific-cruise-gp16-data-workshop/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Cruise Workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151026
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151031
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20141013T122158Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141013T122158Z
UID:1922-1445817600-1446249599@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:IMBER IMBIZO lV
DESCRIPTION:IMBER IMBIZO lVDates: 26-30 October 2015Location: Trieste\, Italy \nFor further information: http://www.imber.info/ \n 
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/imber-imbizo-lv/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151026
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151029
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150723T193539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150723T193539Z
UID:1960-1445817600-1446076799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:The 2nd Open Science Symposium on  Western Pacific Ocean Circulation and Climate (2nd OSS-2015)
DESCRIPTION:The 2nd Open Science Symposium on Western Pacific Ocean Circulation and Climate (2nd OSS-2015)Dates: October 26-28\, 2015Location: Busan\, Korea \nFor furhter information: http://oss2015.wix.com/join \nThe 2nd Open Science Symposium on Western Pacific Ocean Circulation and Climate (2nd OSS-2015) is to be held on October 26-28\, 2015 inBusan\, Korea under the auspices of NPOCE (Northwestern Pacific Ocean Circulation and Climate Experiment) and SPICE (Southwest Pacific Ocean Circulation and Climate Experiment)\, which will provide a forum for oceanographers\, meteorologists and climate scientists to exchange recent progresses and advances in their study of the Western Pacific Ocean (WPO) circulation and climate\, marine biogeochemistry and ecosystem\, their variability\, changes and impacts\, to explore opportunities for international scientific collaboration\, and to promote interdisciplinary study in WPO. It will be an excellent opportunity for students\, early career and young scientists working in the field to show-case their researches\, gain international exposure\, and shape their academic career directions. \nCall for abstracts: \nAbstract submission deadline: July 31\, 2015 \nAcceptance notification: August 31\, 2015 \nRegistration: \nRegistration fee covers: Symposium dinner\, coffee/tea breaks\, and abstracts book etc. \nFees: US$200 for full registration; US$120 for student registration \nOn-line payment and pre-registration will be closed on October 9\, 2015. \nScientific Organizing Committee (SOC): \nCo-chairs: \nDunxin Hu (IOCAS\, China)\, Alexandre Ganachaud (IRD\, France) \nMembers: \nWenju Cai (CSIRO\, Australia)\, Dake Chen (SIO\, SOA\, China)\,Sophie Cravatte (IRD\, France)\, Minhan Dai (Xiamen Univ.\, China)\,Arnold Gordon (Columbia Univ.\, US)\, Dongchull Jeon (KIOST\, Korea)\,William Kessler (NOAA\, US)\, Jae-Hak Lee (KIOST\, Korea)\,Yukio Masumoto (Univ. of Tokyo\, Japan)\, Angelique Melet (LEGOS\, France)\,Bo Qiu (Univ. of Hawaii\, US)\, Stephen Riser (Univ. of Washington\, US)\,Bernadette Sloyan (CSIRO\, Australia)\, Janet Sprintall (Scripps IO\, US)\,Matin Visbeck (GEOMAR\, Germany)\, Fan Wang (IOCAS\, China)\,Susan Wijffels (CSIRO\, Australia)\, Lixin Wu (Ocean Univ. of China\, China)\,Dongliang Yuan (IOCAS\, China)
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/the-2nd-open-science-symposium-on-western-pacific-ocean-circulation-and-climate-2nd-oss-2015/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151015
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151026
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20140926T093654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140926T093654Z
UID:1918-1444867200-1445817599@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:PICES 2015 Annual Meeting
DESCRIPTION:PICES 2015 Annual Meeting: Change and Sustainability of the North PacificDates: 15 – 25 October 2015Location: Qingdao – China \nFor more information: https://www.pices.int/meetings/annual/PICES-2015/2015-theme.aspx
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/pices-2015-annual-meeting/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150928
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151003
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150514T123628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150514T123628Z
UID:1956-1443398400-1443830399@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:22nd ISEB Symposium\, Dynamics of Biogeochemical Systems: Processes and Modeling
DESCRIPTION:22nd International Society for Environmental Biogeochemistry (ISEB) SymposiumDynamics of Biogeochemical Systems: Processes and ModelingDates: 28 September – 2 October 2015Location: Piran\, Slovenia. \nAbstract submission deadline: June 15\, 2015. \nFor futher information: www.iseb22.ijs.si \nGEOTRACES Special Session: \nMarine and coastal environments – Special session: GMOS and GEOTRACES
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/22nd-iseb-symposium-dynamics-of-biogeochemical-systems-processes-and-modeling/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Relevant Special Sessions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150921
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150926
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150130T135331Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150130T135331Z
UID:1941-1442793600-1443225599@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:11th Applied Isotope Geochemistry Symposium (AIG-11)
DESCRIPTION:11th Applied Isotope Geochemistry Symposium (AIG-11)Dates: 21 – 25 September 2015Location: Orléans\, France \nFor further information: http://www.brgm.eu/news-media/aig-11-applied-isotope-geochemistry-conference-orleans-france
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/11th-applied-isotope-geochemistry-symposium-aig-11/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150914
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150919
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150402T084120Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150402T084120Z
UID:1955-1442188800-1442620799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:Sustained ocean observing for the next decade (GAIC2015)
DESCRIPTION:Sustained ocean observing for the next decadeA combined GO-SHIP/Argo/ IOCCP conference on physical and biogeochemical measurements of the water columnDates: 14 – 18 September 2015Location: Galway\, Ireland \nFor further information: http://www.gaic2015.org \nGEOTRACES Oral presentation:  \n4D3. Biogeochemical Cycling of Trace Elements in the Ocean: Current and future opportunities linking GEOTRACES to Argo and GO-SHIPPeter CROOT1\, Greg CUTTER2\, Maeve LOHAN3 and Past and Present members of the GEOTRACES S&I Committee1National University of Ireland\, Galway; 2Old Dominion University; 3University of Plymouth  \n-> Friday\, 18 September 2015 – 15h50-16h10. \n Abstract: The international GEOTRACES (www.geotraces.org) program is focused on identifying the processes\, and quantifying the fluxes\, that control the distributions of key trace elements and isotopes (TEIs) in the ocean\, and to establishing the sensitivity of these distributions to changing environmental conditions. The successful launch in 2014 of the GEOTRACES intermediate data product (IDP) (http://www.geotraces.org/dp/idp2014) was the first release of the global dataset for TEIs and provides a valuable resource for ocean researchers. In the absence of open ocean CRMs for seawater\, quality control for the IDP2014 was achieved through community analysis of consensus samples (e.g. SAFe and GEOTRACES) by the GEOTRACES research community with oversight by the GEOTRACES Standards and Intercalibration Committee (S&IC). This presentation will provide an overview of the approaches used currently by the GEOTRACES S&IC in examining data quality and the potential for greater overlap with other programs such as GO-SHIP\, IOCCP and Argo in the future for examining the role of TEIs in ocean biogeochemistry and climate. \n 
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/sustained-ocean-observing-for-the-next-decade-gaic2015/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150907
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150912
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20140528T115431Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140528T115431Z
UID:1903-1441584000-1442015999@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:SOLAS Open Science Conference 2015
DESCRIPTION:SOLAS Open Science Conference 2015Dates: 7-11 September 2015Location: Kiel\, Germany \nAbstract submission deadline: 27 May 2015 \n \nFor further information: http://www.solas-int.org/osc2015.html
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/solas-open-science-conference-2015/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150816
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150822
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20140909T134506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140909T134506Z
UID:1917-1439683200-1440201599@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:Goldschmidt 2015
DESCRIPTION:Goldschmidt 2015  Dates: 16-21 August 2015 Location: Prague\, Czech Republic \nFor further information: http://goldschmidt.info/2015/index \nGEOTRACES sessions: \n \nTheme 2: Ocean Geochemistry. Present Conditions and Past Variation: fluxes\, reservoirs and processes \n \nCo-ordinators:Geraldine Sarthou (Brest University\, France)Andrew Bowie (University of Tasmania) \n \nTeam members:Katherine Barbeau (Scripps\, USA)\, Kristen Buck (Univ South Florida\, USA)\, Zanna Chase (Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies\, Austra)\, Rob Middag (Univ Otago\, New Zealand)\, James Moffett (Univ. Southern Carolina\, USA) \n \nOur understanding of the functioning of the Earth system requires a knowledge of the broad spectrum of processes that influence chemical composition\, cycling and transfer of elements in the oceans and their interactions with the atmosphere\, land and crust. Ocean geochemistry aims to link and integrate studies of the modern oceans with work using proxies to define how ocean chemistry and the coupled ocean-atmospheric system has changed through the past on a number of different timescales. Critical to these efforts are considerations of how ocean chemistry influences and responds to biological activity and the impact of anthropogenic activity on the marine environment\, with important outcomes to issues as diverse as climate change and the capacity of the oceans to remove toxic metals. This theme welcomes submissions in a wide range of marine research areas\, including contemporary ocean composition and speciation\, transport processes in the ocean\, air-sea gas exchange\, paleo-oceanography\, to the evolution of the ocean due to environmental forcings such as acidity\, temperature\, and oxygen. \nTheme 2 sessions descriptions (complete abstracts of all presentations are available at Goldschmidt site\, please click on the links below to access the Goldschmidt webpage for each session): \n02a: Trace Metals in the Ocean: Distributions\, Isotopic Variation and SpeciationSession Convenors: Katherine Barbeau (UC San Diego\, Scripps Institution of Oceanography\, USA)\, Andrew Bowie (University of Tasmania)\, Kristen Buck (University of South Florida\, College of Marine Science\, USA)\, Rob Middag (Univ Otago\, New Zealand)\, Christopher Pearce (National Oceanography Centre)\, Phil Pogge von Strandmann (Earth Sciences\, University College London\, UK)\, Géraldine Sarthou (LEMAR CNRS\, Brest\, France). \nAbstract: Many trace elements are critical for marine life. However\, the mechanisms controlling how these metals influence the functioning of ocean ecosystems remain elusive. In conjunction with changes in concentration and speciation\, variations in metal stable isotopes provide enhanced discriminatory power for constraining these biogeochemical cycles\, as each process imparts a unique isotopic signature to the water column. The GEOTRACES program\, which aims to map the world’s oceans for trace elements and isotopes with unprecedented resolution\, combined with a growing inventory of metal isotope systems\, has facilitated rapid progress in this area. This session seeks to bring together scientists from recent oceanographic cruises to integrate results within and between ocean basins\, providing new insights on the behaviour of trace metals in the global ocean. We invite abstracts on all aspects of oceanic trace metal distributions and speciation\, as well as their isotopes (both radiogenic and stable)\, including their application to reconstructing past marine processes such as ocean circulation\, redox conditions and hydrothermal activity. We also encourage inter-calibration studies\, development of new analytical techniques and modelling work. \nKeynote speaker: Gideon Henderson (University of Oxford\, UK)Invited speakers: François Lacan (LEGOS CNRS\, Toulouse\, France) \n02b: Radionuclides in the OceanSession Convenors: Bob Anderson (Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory\, USA)\, Ken Buesseler (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution\, USA)\, Pere Masque (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona) \nAbstract: Natural uranium/thorium series\, cosmogenic and anthropogenic radionuclides\, with their in-built “clocks” and contrasting geochemical properties and biological affinities\, have been instrumental for understanding and quantifying many important questions in oceanographic research. Examples include circulation and mixing of water masses\, particle cycling\, sediment and coral dating\, and fluxes at ocean boundaries\, amongst many other processes.  The Fukushima Dai-ichi disaster has also recently heightened public and policy concerns related to the human health effects of radioactivity attributable to external exposure from ocean contact and internal exposure from seafood consumption. Yet knowledge gaps remain regarding the spatial and depth distributions and the temporal evolution of many radionuclides of importance to both oceanographic and human health issues. This session will bring together scientists that are using radionuclides to better understand processes in the oceans through field based studies\, such as GEOTRACES\, laboratory experiments\, and modeling approaches.  This session will also accept presentations on advances in our methods for sampling and the analysis of ocean radionuclides.  More broadly\, the session will consider presentations on new tools to enhance public understanding of radioactivity\, and the education and training of the next generation of marine radiochemists. \nInvited speakers: Valentí Rodellas (Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals\, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona\, Spain)\, John Smith (Bedford Institute of Oceanography\, Canada)\, Walter Geibert (Alfred Wegener Institute\, Germany) \n \n02c: Past Changes in Ocean Biogeochemistry and Circulation and their Interaction with ClimateSession Convenors: Zanna Chase (Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies\, Australia)\, Martin Frank (GEOMAR Helmholtz centre for ocean research Kiel\, Germany)\, Norbert Frank (University of Heidelberg\, Germany)\, Katharina Pahnke (ICBM and MPI for Marine Microbiology\, Germany)\, Laetitia Pichevin (University of Edinburgh\, UK)\, Laura Robinson (University of Bristol\, UK)\, Tina van de Flierdt (Imperial College London\, UK)\, Kazuyo Tachikawa (Cerege\, CNRS\, France) \nAbstract: Ocean biogeochemistry and circulation have influenced or even controlled climate on different time scales. Given that historical observations of ocean properties are restricted to the last ~100 years\, it is essential to reconstruct their involvement in Earth’s climate prior to human induced changes.Trace-element and isotope geochemistry offer powerful tools to constrain such changes. For this session we invite contributions addressing past ocean circulation\, productivity and nutrient cycling based on stable\, radiogenic\, or radioactive isotope signatures or other geochemical tracers from millennial to million year time-scales from the recent past to deep time\, from bulk sediment to deep-sea corals. We also encourage contributions that integrate proxy data and models to understand the dynamics of past ocean circulation. \nKeynote speaker: Jess Adkins (California Institute of Technology\, USA)Invited speaker: Ruza Ivanovic (University of Leeds\, UK) \n02d: What are the unifying principles common to all three Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZs)?Session Convenors: Jim Moffett (Univ. Southern Carolina\, USA)\, Aurélien Paulmier (LEGOS\, France) \nAbstract: Oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) arise from a combination of high productivity on overlying waters and sluggish rates of ventilation within their core\, giving rise to strong oxygen deficits.  In three OMZs (the Arabian Sea\, Eastern Tropical South Pacific\, and Eastern Tropical North Pacific) oxygen is probably effectively zero\, based on recent sensor data.   These are important areas for fixed nitrogen loss on a global scale. Other OMZs\, including the Benguela Upwelling and Bay of Bengal\, are poised to become denitrifying on a large scale but are not so at present. These regions have complex geochemistry and a global significance that extends beyond the nitrogen cycle alone. They are critical domains in which to investigate global change\, with shifts in redox chemistry and their boundaries evident or predicted to occur in the near future. Moreover\, carbon preservation in underlying sediments makes them excellent regimes to study past changes in ocean processes. The purpose of this session is to explore the biogeochemical features common to all OMZs as well as the features that make them different.Many nations have mounted expeditions to study OMZs in recent years\, including several European nations\, Japan\, the USA and states bordering OMZs\, particularly Peru\, Chile and India. Three cruises in the International GEOTRACES program have been staged in denitrifying OMZ regions since 2009\, by Japan\, the USA and India. Researchers from these and other programs\, as well as benthic studies are encouraged to participate in this session. \nKeynote speaker: Bess Ward (Princeton University\, USA)Invited speakers:  Niels Peter Revbesch (University of Aahrus\, Denmark)\, Marcel Kuypers (MPI for Marine Microbiology\, Germany)\, Phyllis Lam (NOCS\, UK)\, Sunil Singh (Physical Research Laboratory\, India) \n02e: Air-Sea Exchange\, the Biological Pump\, and Ocean AcidificationSession Convenors: Steve Emerson (University of Washington\, USA)\, Doug Wallace (Dalhousie University\, Canada) \nAbstract: The pCO2 content of the atmosphere is regulated by exchange with the upper ocean via the solubility and biological pumps.  About one quarter of the anthropogenic CO2 introduced to the atmosphere is ultimately stored in the ocean causing a decrease in pH.  Understanding the physical\, biological and chemical processes controlling the atmosphere-ocean carbon cycle are key to accurate predictions of ocean feedbacks to global warming. While there have been great advances on the relationship between air-sea exchange and wind speed\, mechanisms controlling the fluxes are still uncertain.  Satellite-based estimates of the biological pump predict geographic variations that are not observed in upper-ocean\, mass-balance studies.  The response of ocean pH to the anthropogenic CO2 invasion is nearly certain\, but generalizations about the effects on marine biology are still tenuous.  This session explores recent advances in marine carbon cycle studies in the upper ocean and atmosphere. \nInvited speakers: Henry Bittig (Helmholtz Ctr for Ocean Research\, Kiel\, Germany) and Jan Kaiser (University of East Anglia\, U.K.) \n02f: Biogeochemistry of Arctic and Antarctic sea ice systemsSession Convenors: Jun Nishioka (Univ. Hokkaido\, Japan)\, Delphine Lannuzel (University of Tasmania\, Australia) \nAbstract: Observations have demonstrated that sea ice is biologically and chemically active in the global biogeochemical cycles. However\, Earth system models currently represent sea ice as biologically and chemically inert. The aim of this session is to bring together those working on all aspects of sea ice biogeochemistry to gain a better understanding of the exchanges at the interface between sea ice and the atmosphere and sea ice and the ocean. We particularly encourage presentations on processes involved in the distribution of macro-nutrients\, trace metals and organic carbon\, as well as the uptake and production of climatically-important gases such as CO2\, CH4\, and DMS. \nKeynote speaker: Martin Vancoppenolle (LOCEAN CNRS\, Paris\, France) \n02g: Advances in marine N\, P and Si biogeochemistrySession Convenors: Damien Cardinal (University Pierre and Marie Curie\, LOCEAN\, Paris)\, Albert Colman (University of Chicago\, USA)\, Masha Prokopenko (University of Southern California\, USA)\, Christian März (Newcastle University\, UK) \nAbstract: Nitrogen\, phosphorus and silicon are critical nutrients that help govern net primary production in the oceans and the efficiency of carbon export from the euphotic zone. Though their cycles are coupled\, each element has a very distinct cycle with regard to ocean sources and sinks\, modes of internal recycling and residence times. The biological requirements\, remineralization pathways\, and chemical characteristics (redox state\, solubility\, coupling with carbon) diverge in many important ways\, leading to formation of biogeochemically diverse oceanic regions. In the recent years numerous methodological advances have been developed and several basic concepts revisited with regard to these key macronutrients (e.g. diazotrophy\, Redfield Ratios…). This session will focus on the new insights gained by application of such analytical and modeling approaches. We will particularly encourage contributions dealing with inter-elemental (de)coupling\, multi-spatial scales (from cell to global)\, and/or multi-temporal scales (from geologic past to future). \nKeynote speaker: Laetitia Pichevin (University of Edinburgh\, UK)Invited speakers: Greg de Souza (Princeton University\, USA)\, Kate Hendry (Bristol University\, UK)\, Caroline Slomp (University of Utrecht\, The Netherlands)\, Claire Mahaffey (University of Liverpool\, UK)\, Curtis Deutsch/Tom Weber (University of Washington) \n02s: Goldschmidt 25th Anniversary \nCatherine Jeandel\, GEOTRACES IPO senior scientist\, reviewed the last 25 years of marine geochemistry. Her talk is available to download here.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/goldschmidt-2015/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Relevant Special Sessions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150727
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150803
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20141126T112920Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141126T112920Z
UID:1928-1437955200-1438559999@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:INQUA 2015
DESCRIPTION:INQUA 2015\, Quaternary Perspectives on Climate Change\, Natural Hazards and CivilizationDates: 27 July – 2 August 2015Location: Nagoya (Japan) \nFor further information: http://www.inqua2015.jp \nRelated session: \nModern calibration of palaeoenvironmental proxies from biogenic carbonate geochemistryhttp://convention.jtbcom.co.jp/inqua2015/session/p28.html \n \nConveners: Amy Prendergast (University of Mainz) and Emma Versteegh (California Institute of Technology). \n \nGeochemical signatures from biogenic carbonates are being increasingly employed as palaeoenvironmental proxies. Some of these proxies (e.g. ostracods\, foraminifera) grow in specific seasons allowing the reconstruction of seasonally-weighted environmental records. Others (e.g. corals\, mollusc shells\, otoliths\, faunal teeth) have incremental growth structures\, which allow the reconstruction of snapshots of palaeoenvironmental variability at sub-seasonal timescales. These proxies accumulate in geological or archaeological deposits\, and can be directly dated using methods such radiocarbon\, U-Th series\, or amino acid racemisation\, providing high resolution\, temporally-constrained palaeoenvironmental data. As with any living creature\, the life cycles of carbonate-secreting organisms are complex. It is becoming increasingly evident that inter and intra-species differences in growth rates\, physiology\, and environmental responses can cause variations in the chemical profiles of biogenic carbonates. Therefore\, before geochemical analysis is employed for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction\, it is necessary to examine modern populations of the proxy species\, or related taxa\, to understand how geochemical variations are influenced by local environmental conditions. This allows any offsets between the environmental signal and the carbonate geochemistry to be identified\, and allows the generation of more quantitative records of environmental change. This session invites presentations on proxy development and validation in biogenic carbonates\, including work on marine\, freshwater and terrestrial organisms\, and on traditional as well as novel geochemical proxies and applications.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/inqua-2015/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150726
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150801
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150311T091106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150311T091106Z
UID:1949-1437868800-1438387199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:2015 Gordon Research Conference on Chemical Oceanography
DESCRIPTION:2015 Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on Chemical OceanographyProcesses at interfaces:  Bridging spatial\, temporal and disciplinary divides from micro- to global scalesDates: 26-31 July 2015Location: Holderness School\, Holderness\, NH\, USA \nMany of the most dynamic and intriguing chemical processes in the ocean occur at interfaces.  The rates and mechanisms of chemical reactions at interfaces can profoundly shape chemical oceanography\, whether those interfaces be large-scale spatial boundaries (such as between water masses\, biomes\, or at air-sea and land-sea interfaces)\, smaller-scale transitions (such as between zones of different redox state in the water column or sediments)\, or micro-scale boundaries (such as at the interface between plankton and their aquatic medium or between mineral surfaces and seawater). Intriguing shifts in ocean chemistry have also occurred at temporal boundaries between different climatic periods\, or between geological epochs.  Progress in chemical oceanography increasingly relies on melding tools and perspectives from different disciplines in order to generate new insights and deeper understanding of important oceanic processes and features.  Examples of disciplines across which chemical oceanographers work include biochemistry\, molecular biology\, geochemistry\, analytical chemistry\, materials science\, and chemical oceanography. This conference seeks to highlight how chemical oceanography bridges interfaces across space\, time\, and discipline\, and to highlight new approaches to current questions. \nIn addition\, for the first time since its inception\, the Gordon Research Conference (GRC) in Chemical Oceanography will be preceded by a 2-day GORDON RESEARCH SEMINAR (GRS)\, on JULY 25-26 AT THE SAME LOCATION.  Chaired by two recent postdoctoral scientists\, the GRS is a forum for postdocs and graduate students to interact with their peers in a GRC-type atmosphere\, where they can test their presentation and discussion skills in the absence of the more senior cadre.  In addition to organizing presentations and posters by students and postdocs\, the GRS chair and vice-chair will invite a keynote speaker to discuss professional development issues of concern to junior members of the field.  Coupling the GRS with the GRC will greatly amplify the educational and professional experience of the students/postdocs\, and will likely improve their ability to communicate their research at the subsequent GRC. \nDEADLINES: \n– GRS SPEAKER ABSTRACT DEADLINE: APRIL 25\, 2015 \n– GRS MEETING APPLICATION: JUNE 27\, 2015 \n– GRC MEETING APPLICATION: JUNE 28\, 2015 \nFor more information\, see:http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?id=11095http://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?id=16980 \nYour meeting chairs: \nGRC: Kathleen Ruttenberg (kcr@hawaii.edu) and Karen Casciotti (kcasciot@stanford.edu)GRS: Angelos Hannides (hannides@hawaii.edu) and Jess Fitzsimmons (jessfitz@mit.edu)
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/2015-gordon-research-conference-on-chemical-oceanography/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150715
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150718
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20141125T163734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141125T163734Z
UID:1926-1436918400-1437177599@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:2015 GEOTRACES Scientific Steering Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:2015 GEOTRACES SSC MeetingfDates: 15-17 July 2015Location: Vancouver\, Canada \n 
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/2015-geotraces-scientific-steering-committee-meeting/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Meetings
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150713
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150715
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20141125T163840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141125T163840Z
UID:1927-1436745600-1436918399@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:2015 GEOTRACES Data Management Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:2015 GEOTRACES DMC MeetingDates:  13-14 July 2015Location: Vancouver\, Canada \n 
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/2015-geotraces-data-management-committee-meeting/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Meetings
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150707
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150711
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20140619T152030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140619T152030Z
UID:1907-1436227200-1436572799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:Our Common Future Under Climate Change
DESCRIPTION:Our Common Future Under Climate ChangeDates: 7-10 July 2015Location: Paris\, France \n \nFor futher information: http://www.commonfuture-paris2015.org
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/our-common-future-under-climate-change/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150704
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150709
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150119T100100Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150119T100100Z
UID:1938-1435968000-1436399999@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:ICBM Summer School on Coastal Systems 2015
DESCRIPTION:ICBM Summer School on Coastal Systems 2015: Water Column Processes from Coast to OceanDates: 4-18 July 2015Location:ICBM facilities located in Wilhelmshaven and Oldenburg (northern Germany) \nThe Institute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM)\, University of Oldenburg\, (Germany)\, is holding a summer school dealing with (micro)biology\, chemistry\, and physics of the southern North Sea coast and the Wadden Sea\, one of the largest tidal systems world-wide and UNESCO World Heritage since 2009. The interdisciplinary scientific program has a focus on the water column and comprises excursions\, sampling\, lab work using up-to-date analytical instrumentation\, and lectures concerning different topics of coastal research. \nMain scientific topics include: introduction to the coastal area of the southern North Sea and Wadden Sea research; plankton ecology; microbiology and proteomics; nutrient\, trace metal\, and isotope geochemistry; sea surface microlayer; hydrodynamics and modelling; excursions by research boats\, car\, and on foot (tidal flats\, ecology\, landscape history and climate\, and regional culture). \nFee: 120 Euro. The fee includes accommodation in the ICBM guesthouse\, meals\, local transport\, and course materials. The summer school is sponsored by the German Academic Exchange service (DAAD). Travel grants are available to non-German participants according to DAAD regulations. \nWho should apply? The summer school aims at young scientists with a background in marine or environmental natural sciences of all disciplines (mainly at PhD student level\, but also advanced master students or young post-docs).  \nDeadline for application is March 22\, 2015 \nPlease visit our website for further information: http://icbm.de/summerschool/ \nContact: \nICBM Summer Schoolicbm.summerschool@uni-oldenburg.de \nDr. Jürgen Köster Phone +49-(0)441-798 3350Dr. Birte Junge\, Phone +49-(0)441-798 5344 \nInstitute for Chemistry and Biology of the Marine Environment (ICBM)Carl-von-Ossietzky University of OldenburgD-26111 Oldenburg  ­ Germany
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/icbm-summer-school-on-coastal-systems-2015/
CATEGORIES:Other Training Activities of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150626
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150701
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150123T132130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150123T132130Z
UID:1939-1435276800-1435708799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:IUGG General Assembly 2015 - IAPSO Symposium
DESCRIPTION:IUGG General Assembly 2015 – IAPSO SymposiumDates: 26-30 June 2015Location: Prague\, Czeck Republic \nFor further information: http://www.iugg2015prague.com/iapso-symposia.htm \nAbstract submission deadline: 31 January 2015 \nGEOTRACES-relevant sessions: \nP12. IIOE to IIOE-2 – Five Decades of Indian Ocean Oceanography: Challenges in Physics and Biogeochemistry of the Indian OceanConveners:  Satheesh Shenoi (Hyderabad\, India)\, Mike McPhaden (Seattle\, USA)\, Yukio Masumoto (Tokyo\, Japan) and Raleigh Hood (Cambridge\, USA). \nThe first coordinated investigation of the Indian Ocean was carried out during the International Indian Ocean Expedition (IIOE) in 1962–65. It consisted of a basin-wide survey that subsequently resulted in a comprehensive hydrographic atlas and number of regional studies\, including the first survey of the seasonally reversing Somali Current. IIOE was planned and executed by the Scientific Committee on Ocean Research (SCOR) and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) with the involvement of 20 countries. Forty-six research vessels belonging to 14 countries participated in the basin wide hydrographic surveys. It was an unprecedented interdisciplinary endeavor embracing physical oceanography\, chemical oceanography\, marine biology\, meteorology and marine geology and geophysics. \nIn the 50 years since the IIOE\, many subsequent programs have lead to improvements in our ability to observe the ocean and atmosphere through the deployments of oceanographic and meteorological sensors on Earth-observing satellites and through deployment of in situ instruments like autonomous profiling floats\, moored buoys\, tsunami detection networks\, sea level gauges\, etc. All of them have dramatically improved the characterization of both physical and biological oceanographic variability and the atmospheric forcing of that variability. Together with the improvements in observing\, ocean modeling in all its facets from short-term forecasting to seasonal prediction to climate projections also has improved dramatically. Based on these improvements\, science foci have also been changed from understanding of climatological states to their variability. Hence\, compared to the IIOE era\, which relied almost exclusively on ship-based observations\, new measurement technologies in combination with targeted and well-coordinated field programs provide the capacity for a much more integrated picture of the Indian Ocean variability. This symposium\, on the eve of the 50th Anniversary of the IIOE\, will review the current state of our knowledge about the physics and biogeochemistry of the Indian Ocean and highlight the scientific challenges to be addressed during a second multi-disciplinary\, multi-national Indian Ocean Expedition (IIOE-2) to be carried out over 2015-2020.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/iugg-general-assembly-2015-iapso-symposium/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Relevant Special Sessions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150622
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150702
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20141104T125311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141104T125311Z
UID:1925-1434931200-1435795199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:IOCCP First Summer Course
DESCRIPTION:IOCCP First Summer CourseInstrumenting Our Oceans For Better Observation: A Training Course on Autonomous Biogeochemical SensorsDates: June 22- July 1\, 2015Location: Sven Loven Center for Marine Sciences\, Kristineberg\, Sweden \nFor futher information: http://www.ioccp.org/sensorscourse
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/ioccp-first-summer-course/
CATEGORIES:Other Training Activities of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150614
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150620
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150129T152055Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150129T152055Z
UID:1940-1434240000-1434758399@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:12th International Conference on Mercury as a Global Pollutant
DESCRIPTION:12th International Conference on Mercury as a Global Pollutant Dates: 14 – 19 June 2015Location: Jeju\, Korea \nFor further information: http://mercury2015.com \nGEOTRACES-related Session: \n17. Integrating marine observational studies and model developmentConveners: Anne Laerke Soerensen & Lars-Eric Heimbürger \nOn a global scale the primary mercury exposure pathway for humans is via the consumption of marine fish that bioaccumulates methylmercury. The marine production of methylmercury is thought to be related to the bacterial degradation of organic matter and inorganic mercury availability. Anthropogenic mercury emissions have increased the oceanic mercury reservoir\, and thereby lead to increased methylmercury production and human exposure. Models simulating mercury biogeochemistry and transport in the oceans have been developed\, yet few oceanic observations have so far been available to evaluate model performance. Moreover\, marine mercury observations in most oceans have shown large decreases over the past decades. This may be related to decreased anthropogenic mercury inputs to the oceans or to better analytical performances. In this session we would like to confront recent model results with the latest field observations as well as define knowledge gaps and future research needs for combined observation – model assessments. We invite talks concerning mercury cycling and speciation in the oceans\, ideally\, but not limited to model approaches and field data. \n Conference Workshops: \nGEOTRACES Intercalibration exercises for Hg species in seawater discussion forumConveners: Lars-Eric Heimbürger \nMercury is one of the least concentrated elements in the oceans. We need to be able to measure\, understand and interpret variability in mercury concentrations in the ocean\, which is often as low as some 10 percent. We organized international intcalibration exercises for total mercury and total methylmercury determination in sea water collected during the 2013 Dutch GEOTRACES MedBlack cruise (GA04- Black Sea) and the 2014 French GEOTRACES GEOVIDE (GA01- North Atlantic Ocean). Both exercises were intended to primarily evaluate the analytical performance of each participating laboratory. Therefore each laboratory received a single sample bottle of similar size\, that has undergone the same cleaning procedure prior to sampling\, and each sample was preserved in the same manner. The 2013 exercise was intended as a broader screening with a maximum number (25) of participating laboratories. Results indicated substantial disagreement between the participating laboratories\, for both total mercury and methylmercury determinations. For the 2014 exercise we could only invite 10 laboratories. Intercomparability of the second exercise was considerably better\, but needs to be further improved in the years to come. For this workshop we invite the participants of the of those and previous GEOTRACES intercalibration exercises as well as scientists interested in marine mercury and low level measurements. Together\, we will examine the results of both intercalibration exercises in detail\, attempt to explain causes for disagreements\, and develop ideas for future developments to achieve traceable mercury measurements in the oceans.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/12th-international-conference-on-mercury-as-a-global-pollutant/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Relevant Special Sessions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150610
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150612
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150223T105406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150223T105406Z
UID:1945-1433894400-1434067199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:US GEOTRACES Scientific Steering Committee meeting
DESCRIPTION:US GEOTRACES SSC meetingDates: 10-11 June 2015Location: US National Science Foundation
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/us-geotraces-scientific-steering-committee-meeting-2/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Meetings
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150607
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150611
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150202T195714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150202T195714Z
UID:1942-1433635200-1433980799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:13th International Symposium on Estuarine Biogeochemistry - IEBS 2015
DESCRIPTION:13th International Symposium on Estuarine Biogeochemistry – IEBS 2015Dates: 7 – 10 June 2015Location: Bordeaux\, France \nFor further information: http://iebs2015.sciencesconf.org/ \nAbstract deadline: 15 February 2015 \nThe 2015 meeting is the 13th edition of the IEBS series focused on estuarine biogeochemical processes and covering the wide diversity of estuaries and bays in terms of morphology\, geographic position\, climate region\, and anthropogenic pressure. The objective is to identify\, understand and predict roles and responses of estuaries and bays in a context of forecast increasing population pressure on the global coastal zones. Contributions on reference (close-to-natural) and modified systems and approaches to estuary trajectories (“past-present-future”) are welcome. Specific items include\, but are not restricted to; sources\, behavior and fate of nutrients\, organic matter\, historical and emerging inorganic/organic contaminants\, nanoparticles\, etc.One session will be dedicated to new sensors and recent developments for permanent high-resolution monitoring of chemicals in coastal zones. \nTentative topics are: \n1)    Past\, present and future anthropogenic pressure – how do environmental changes affect nutrient and Organic Matter cycles\, eutrophication\, contaminant fate\, coastal ocean acidification and ecosystem functions \n2)    Physical and chemical factors influencing biogeochemistry and exchanges at estuarine boundaries (sediment-water-air\, urban areas\, subterranean estuaries) \n3)    New techniques and technologies for in-situ high-resolution monitoring in estuaries and bays
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/13th-international-symposium-on-estuarine-biogeochemistry-iebs-2015/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150527
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150530
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150306T083237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150306T083237Z
UID:1947-1432684800-1432943999@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:Blue Planet Symposium 2014
DESCRIPTION:Blue Planet Symposium 2014Dates: 27-29 May 2015Location: Cairns\, Australia \nFor further information: http://www.blueplanetsymposium.com
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/blue-planet-symposium-2014/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150526
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150528
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150311T093149Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150311T093149Z
UID:1952-1432598400-1432771199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:GEOVIDE (GA01) post cruise meeting
DESCRIPTION:GEOVIDE (GA01) post cruise meetingDates: 26-27 May 2015Location: IUEM\, Brest\, France \nAgenda and Participants List \nThe Agenda and Participant List are available to download.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/geovide-ga01-post-cruise-meeting/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Cruise Workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150519
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150523
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150223T152542Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150223T152542Z
UID:1946-1431993600-1432339199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:Harmful Algal Blooms and Climate Change Symposium
DESCRIPTION:Harmful Algal Blooms and Climate Change SymposiumDates: 19-22 May 2015Location: Gothenburg\, Sweden \nFor further information:  http://pices.int/meetings/international_symposia/2015/2015-HAB/scope.aspx
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/harmful-algal-blooms-and-climate-change-symposium/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150507
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150508
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150309T101535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150309T101535Z
UID:1948-1430956800-1431043199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:First JPI Oceans Conference
DESCRIPTION:First JPI Oceans ConferenceDate: 7 May 2015Location: Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts\, in Brussels\, Belgium \nFor further information: http://www.jpi-oceans.eu
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/first-jpi-oceans-conference/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150412
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150418
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150108T085556Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150108T085556Z
UID:1933-1428796800-1429315199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:EGU 2015\, European Geosciences Union  General Assembly
DESCRIPTION:EGU 2015\, European Geosciences Union  General AssemblyDates: 12-17 April 2015Location: Vienna\, Austria \nFor more information: http://www.egu2015.eu/home.html \nGEOTRACES-related session: \nHS8.2.7 : Submarine and Sublacustrine Groundwater DischargeConvener: Ulf MallastCo-Conveners: Christian Siebert\, Yossi Yechieli\, Pieter van Beek\, Jean WilsonLink: http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2015/session/18450 \nOver the last years\, near-shore and offshore submarine and sublacustrine groundwater discharge (more generally referred to as SGD) has been recognized as an important component of the hydrological cycle. Total SGD fluxes are proposed to be similar in or even exceed the volume of riverine flux in certain regions. These fluxes do not only comprise a significant water volume loss being essential for e.g. semi(-arid) regions and the increasing population and industrial water demands along coastlines\, but likewise\, can contain a significant concentration of nutrients\, organic compounds and heavy-metals that may deteriorate coastal zone environments.These aspects call for qualitative and quantitative SGD investigations on different temporal and spatial scales to gain reliable information that could be integrated into groundwater and coastal water management plans. \nWith the session we want to provide a basis for scientist from different disciplines to report about their approaches and results in regard to SGD. The session is not intended to cope with aspects of sea-water intrusion into aquifers but is focused on submarine or sublacustrine discharge and the herein involved processes and effects. \nTopics include but are not limited to:• Monitoring and measuring techniques (remote sensing\, in-situ sensor arrays\, seepage meter experiments\, ACDP measurements etc.)• Hydrochemical and microbacterial investigation concerning groundwater characterization• Numerical modeling including aspects of recirculation\, plume distribution and SGD quantification• Ecological processes and effects
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/egu-2015-european-geosciences-union%e2%80%a8-general-assembly/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150412
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150418
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20140715T083117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140715T083117Z
UID:1915-1428796800-1429315199@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:Methods and Applications of Radioanalytical Chemistry (MARC X)
DESCRIPTION:Methods and Applications of Radioanalytical Chemistry (MARC X)Dates: 12-17 April 2015Location: Kailua\, Hawaii\, US \nFor further information: http://www.marcconference.org
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/methods-and-applications-of-radioanalytical-chemistry-marc-x/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150407
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150412
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20141126T154747Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20141126T154747Z
UID:1929-1428364800-1428796799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:SCOR WG 139 Open Workshop and Symposium on Organic Ligands in the Ocean
DESCRIPTION:SCOR WG 139 Open Workshop and Symposium on Organic Ligands in the OceanDates: 7-11 April 2015Location: Sibenik\, Croatia \nFor further information: https://www.confmanager.com/main.cfm?cid=2828
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/scor-wg-139-open-workshop-and-symposium-on-organic-ligands-in-the-ocean/
CATEGORIES:Other Conferences of Interest
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150330
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150401
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20150311T092829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20150311T092829Z
UID:1950-1427673600-1427846399@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:MedBlack GEOTRACES (GA04) post cruise meeting
DESCRIPTION:MedBlack GEOTRACES post cruise meetingDate: 30-31 March 2015Location: Royal NIOZ\, Texel\, Netherlands
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/medblack-geotraces-ga04-post-cruise-meeting/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Cruise Workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150323
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150328
DTSTAMP:20260405T223822
CREATED:20140410T125109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20140410T125109Z
UID:1896-1427068800-1427500799@www.geotraces.org
SUMMARY:3rd International Symposium on "Effects of Climate Change on the World's Oceans"
DESCRIPTION:3rd International Symposium on the Effects of Climate Change on the World’s OceansDates: 23-27 March 2015Location: Santos\, Brazil \n \nFor further information: http://www.pices.int/meetings/international_symposia/2015/2015-Climate-Change/scope.aspx \n \nGEOTRACES-related session: \n \nS3. Changing Ocean Chemistry: From Trace Elements and Isotopes to Radiochemistry and Organic Chemicals of Environmental ConcernCo-chairs: Angelica Peña (Institute of Ocean Sciences\, Department of Fisheries and Oceans\, Canada) and Geraldine Sarthou (LEMAR\, IUEM\, Brest\, France) \n \nPlenary Speaker:Micha Rijkenberg (Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research\, The Netherlands) \n \nInvited Speaker:Maeve Lohan (School of Geography\, Earth and Environmental Sciences\, University of Plymouth\, UK) \n \nOcean chemistry has changed during the Anthropocene. International efforts such as GEOTRACES have improved scientific understanding of the marine biogeochemical cycles and distributions of trace element\, isotopes and organic chemicals in the marine environment\, and their synergistic relationships with anthropogenic drivers and climate change. This session invites presentations on assessments and understanding of changes in ocean chemistry including trace elements\, isotopes\, radiochemistry and organic chemicals of environmental concern. Areas of focus include (1) historical and future trends in ocean chemistry and synergistic relationships with marine biogeochemistry and ecosystems; (2) scientific outcomes of recent work on the marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements\, isotopes\, radiochemistry and organic chemicals\, and measurements of change in ocean chemistry (e.g.\, iron\, mercury\, lead\, organic chemicals\, petroleum\, and plastics); and (3) future challenges facing the study of changes in ocean chemistry associated with anthropogenic drivers and climate change.
URL:https://www.geotraces.org/event/3rd-international-symposium-on-effects-of-climate-change-on-the-worlds-oceans/
CATEGORIES:GEOTRACES Relevant Special Sessions
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR