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American Geophysical Union, fall 2011 meeting, with new features line uploading electronic files of poster presentations. A mobile app is also available for the Fall meeting.  +
An international body established since 2003, the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) aims to promote geosciences and advance its applications for the benefit of humanity in Asia and Oceania. As these regions have been most prone to natural hazards, accounting for approximately 80% of human lives lost globally due to such catastrophes, we are committed to our calling to better address hazard related issues. We actively contribute through publications of international journals and an annual convention that brings with it great opportunities for various geosciences fields to engage and exchange academic information, research findings and developments. As part of the geosciences community worldwide, we also recognize the importance of developing collaborations with our global counterparts and have established good cooperation with fellow bodies including the European Geosciences Union (EGU), American Geophysical Union (AGU), International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG), Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU), and Science Council of Asia (SCA).  +
An international conference on mountain research, "The International Mountain Conference (IMC)" (https://www.uibk.ac.at/congress/imc2019/index.html.en), will be held in Innsbruck from 08–12 September 2019, aiming to build upon the three previous mountain conferences that took place in Perth (Scotland). We want to draw your attention to the workshop "Mountain (socio-)hydrology in a changing climate" which is covering aspects of climate change impacts on water resources in mountain regions with emphasis on feedbacks between social and hydrological processes (https://www.uibk.ac.at/congress/imc2019/program/). Abstract submission is open until 14 February 2019 (https://www.uibk.ac.at/congress/imc2019/application.html.en). We want to encourage all interested colleagues to visit the conference and participate in our workshop.  +
An open FVCOM Users’ Workshop will be held at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography (BIO), Dartmouth NS, Canada during the week of 17-21 October 2016 (exact dates to be determined but the meeting will likely last 2.5 days). The meeting will be of a similar format to the meeting held at BIO in October 2015. Dr. Changsheng Chen, principal architect of FVCOM, from the Marine Ecosystems Dynamics Laboratory, University of Massachusetts will be summarizing the present status of FVCOM and future plans. Users are invited to talk about their experiences in presentations and posters and share tools developed for input and output of FVCOM applications. This workshop is open to all FVCOM users and developers as well as interested parties.  +
Applications are now being accepted for participation in an NSF-sponsored workshop on Future Directions in Tectonics, to be held in Madison, WI on May 20-22, 2016 (see attached announcement). This workshop had been postponed from July 2015 to allow greater community participation and will result in creation of a white paper, designed to help guide research and funding in tectonics over the next decade. Applications for participating in the workshop and travel support should be submitted by February 19th at http://goo.gl/forms/ozAhTec0My. Notification of application status will be made by March 18th. Feedback for the organizing committee on the content and format of the workshop may be submitted at: http://goo.gl/forms/OpLAuWPuw9. Community-written, pre-meeting "idea papers" may also be submitted by April 8th. Short papers (1 page for single author, 2 pages for group) that outline the perceived top research priorities, grand challenges, and opportunities for the coming decades in tectonics should be sent directly to directions.sgt@gmail.com. The final workshop agenda will be announced by May 6th. We look forward to working with you to craft a vision for the future direction of tectonic research. Organizers: Rick Allmendinger, Marin Clark, Eric Cowgill, Becky Dorsey, Kevin Mahan, James Spotila  +
As a member of the organizing committee of the 13th International Symposium on Landslides, which will take place in the Caribbean city of Cartagena, Colombia in June 2020, I would like to ask you if you could help us to promote the event through the Gilbert Club Network: In association with the Joint Technical Committee on Natural Slopes and Landslides (JTC1) and the Federation of International Geo-engineering Societies: ISSMGE,ISRM and IAEG (FedIGS), the Colombian Geotechnical Society-CGS cordially invites the international geotechnical community to participate in the XIII International Symposium on Landslides-XIII ISL, which will be held from June 15 to 19 - 2020 in the city of Cartagena-Colombia. http://www.scg.org.co/xiii-isl/index.html All abstracts, draft manuscripts and final manuscripts shall be submitted to the Conference staff through the ISSMGE's Conference Review Platform whose address is: https://www.issmge.org/publications/review-platform/conferences/isl2020 People interested in submitting documents for the Conference should visit the website listed above and register. The account credentials should be used to access the platform for subsequent submittals. First-time submittals should be performed in two steps. Firstly, the authors should provide a text of their abstract. Secondly, after acceptance, authors should submit a PDF copy of their manuscript before the papers submission deadline. Manuscript deadline: November 11, 2019. I thank you in advance for your kind support. Best regards, Miguel Angel Cabrera<br> Universidad de los Andes  +
As a preeminent international geological organization, the American Association of Petroleum Geologists(AAPG) is uniquely positioned to attract a focused audience of geosciences professionals. The technical program at ACE attracts industry leaders worldwide for its well-regarded oral and poster presentations. AAPG has more than 34,000 members ranging from geologists and company leaders to students and young professionals. Many of our members have been involved for most of their careers. ACE is a world-class event, regularly attracting an average of 6,900 global attendees from 78 countries over the last five years. The breadth and depth of the technical program is international in scope and appeals to multiple geosciences disciplines. ACE also boasts the International Pavilion, a worldwide showcase for countries promoting exploration and investment opportunities. The IP fosters interaction between government representatives and industry, resulting in the creation of successful business relationships.  +
As for past editions, the World Conference on Natural Resource Modeling brings together scientists and stakeholders interested in mathematical and numerical modeling of renewable and exhaustible resources. The WCNRM2017 will be a pool for exchanging ideas to help inform management ecosystems, natural resources and their exploitation. One of the WCNRM2017 main goals is to foster cooperation among disciplines of ecology, economics, management, mathematics and computer sciences.<br><br><br><br><br><br>  +
Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) was established in 2003 to promote geosciences and its application for the benefit of humanity, specifically in Asia and Oceania and with an overarching approach to global issues. Asia Oceania region is particularly vulnerable to natural hazards, accounting for almost 80% human lives lost globally. AOGS is deeply involved in addressing hazard related issues through improving our understanding of the genesis of hazards through scientific, social and technical approaches. AOGS holds annual conventions providing a unique opportunity of exchanging scientific knowledge and discussion to address important geo-scientific issues among academia, research institution and public. Recognizing the need of global collaboration, AOGS has developed good co-operation with other international geo-science societies and unions such as the European Geosciences Union (EGU), American Geophysical Union (AGU), International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG), Japan Geo-science Union (JpGU), and Science Council of Asia (SCA).  +
Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) was established in 2003 to promote geosciences and its application for the benefit of humanity, specifically in Asia and Oceania and with an overarching approach to global issues. Asia- Oceania region is particularly vulnerable to natural hazards, accounting for almost 80% human lives lost globally. AOGS is deeply involved in addressing hazard related issues through improving our understanding of the genesis of hazards through scientific, social and technical approaches. AOGS holds annual conventions providing a unique opportunity of exchanging scientific knowledge and discussion to address important geo-scientific issues among academia, research institution and public. Recognizing the need of global collaboration, AOGS has developed good co-operation with other international geo-science societies and unions such as the European Geosciences Union (EGU), American Geophysical Union (AGU), International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG), Japan Geo-science Union (JpGU), and Science Council of Asia (SCA).  +
Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS) was established in 2003 to promote geosciences and its application for the benefit of humanity, specifically in Asia and Oceania and with an overarching approach to global issues. Asia- Oceania region is particularly vulnerable to natural hazards, accounting for almost 80% human lives lost globally. AOGS is deeply involved in addressing hazard related issues through improving our understanding of the genesis of hazards through scientific, social and technical approaches. AOGS holds annual conventions providing a unique opportunity of exchanging scientific knowledge and discussion to address important geo-scientific issues among academia, research institution and public. Recognizing the need of global collaboration, AOGS has developed good co-operation with other international geo-science societies and unions such as the European Geosciences Union (EGU), American Geophysical Union (AGU), International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG), Japan Geo-science Union (JpGU), and Science Council of Asia (SCA). '''Why AOGS?''' * Our mission is to promote geophysical science for the benefit of humanity in Asia and Oceania. * AOGS sees the region that stretches from Kashmir to Wellington as a hotbed filled with challenges and nascent potential. * Asia and Oceania currently holds the largest population, and is still rapidly developing. * There are unique scientific issues to discover and understand in a region that is more diverse than any other regions.  +
BioHydrology 2019 is the fifth international conference on biohydrology, after those of Prague (2006), Bratislava (2009), Landau (2013) and Almería (2016). The aim of the BioHydrology conference is to provide a forum to share knowledge and networking any topic related to the interactions between biotic systems and hydrology, and how humans impact this interaction. The conference is addressed to experts from ecology, hydrology, geography, soil science, environmental sciences, biology, geomorphology, forestry, agronomy, and researchers, stakeholder and policymaker is welcome. We propose an interdisciplinary approach to the biohydrology world.  +
CUAHSI is hosting a conference on Hydroinformatics and Modeling for researchers to showcase advances in hydrologic data and information systems and modeling technology and their use to advance hydrologic science. Contributions are solicited on scientific progress enabled through the use of advanced information systems and models. The conference will include technical sessions on hydrologic information systems and hydrologic modeling and hands-on training and workshops to introduce the community to the services provided by the new CUAHSI Water Data Center.  +
CUAHSI is pleased to offer a week-long course focusing on hydrologic watershed processes including theory, experimental design, and modeling. '''Course Description'''<br> This master class will introduce advanced modeling and data analysis techniques to interpret data from intensive watershed studies and will explore our current understanding of hydrological, ecological and biogeochemical processes. Consistent themes throughout the course is the interplay between models and data and the process of formulating models from the conceptual stage through its formal construction and evaluation. This week-long short course presents a unique opportunity for students and post-docs to explore watershed hydrology and biogeochemistry at the Biosphere 2 (B2) facility of the University of Arizona, outside of Tucson. Students will be working with LEO data. Differing perspectives on watershed science theory, experimental design, and modeling will be provided by leading scientists in the field. While designed for graduate students, other professionals are welcome to register for the course. The course will be held at the Biosphere 2 facility of the University of Arizona in Oracle, AZ. Included in the registration fee are course tuition, facilities costs, lodging, all meals while on-site, and shuttle transportation to/from the airport. Visit http://www.cvent.com/events/master-class-advanced-techniques-in-watershed-science/event-summary-641780b846384b64bdb358c129ad2953.aspx event website for more information and to register: https://www.cvent.com/events/master-class-advanced-techniques-in-watershed-science/registration-641780b846384b64bdb358c129ad2953.aspx?fqp=true  +
Catchment science uses intensive observation to understand how physical, chemical and biological processes interact to shape the landscape-scale functioning of ecosystems. It has frequently redefined paradigms of process understanding in hydrology, biogeochemistry, and ecology. However, transferring process knowledge to other sites and scaling knowledge to river basins has proven challenging. Advances in computing power have enabled the construction of integrated models at high spatial resolution and continental scale not only on grids but also on river reaches and their associated catchments. Is a reach-based landscape discretization more amenable to hypothesis testing than a gridded one because it captures physically meaningful landscape units? The ubiquitous predictions made by such models may provide a new approach to transcending the uniqueness of place. This conference will explore how field-based process understanding is integrated into high-resolution, spatially extensive models. The predictions of such models essentially represent a conjecture of how hypothesized catchment processes are integrated at river basin to continental scales. The conference will also explore how these processes change in a non-stationary environment. High-resolution land-surface data (e.g. DEMs, land cover, stream networks) coupled with high-performance computing have enabled initial development of such models which tend to focus on physical processes, but challenges remain to develop comparable data sets for the subsurface (e.g. mineralogy, hydraulic properties), and how to best capture the state of the art in our understanding of hydrology, biology, ecology and geochemistry. Conference sessions will consider the interplay between hypotheses, field observations, and models: How have "big data" techniques, such as data mining and pattern identification, impacted catchment science? Have high frequency sensor data provided new insights into hydrologic and biogeochemical processes?  
Chesapeake Bay Restoration, Resilience, and Reflection: Progress and Future Challenges The Chesapeake Community Modeling Program is excited to convene the 2022 edition of our biennial symposium. Please join us June 6-8, 2022 for Chesapeake Community Research Symposium 2022 in Annapolis, Maryland and online. Scope and Aims Significant progress has been made toward restoring Chesapeake Bay water quality and living resources. This progress includes the achievement of the 2025 goals for nitrogen and phosphorus pollutant load reductions collectively from hundreds of Chesapeake Bay watershed municipal and industrial wastewater treatment facilities a decade early. In addition, trends in recent years suggest that the summertime anoxic volume (i.e., dead zone) is decreasing and submerged aquatic vegetation has shown signs of recovering. However, restoration efforts face significant challenges as we enter the third decade of the 21st century. Perhaps the most daunting future challenge is maintaining progress in the face of a changing natural and human environment. Globally influenced changes in regional weather patterns and sea level rise are affecting temperature, watershed dynamics, groundwater processes, estuarine hydrodynamics, biogeochemistry, and ecology. In addition, increasing human population in the watershed continue to influence stressors that will interact with the effects of climate change and sea level rise. Moreover, there is a pressing need to consider the effects that changing environmental conditions have on higher trophic levels and ecosystem services which, until recently have received considerably less attention than submerged aquatic vegetation and benthic filter feeders.  +
Collaborate, network and discuss original research with hundreds of Earth and earthquake scientists, exhibitors, students and more at the Seismological Society of America’s Annual Meeting.<br> The 2020 Annual Meeting will be held in Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA from 27–30 April. The meeting is co-chaired by Rick Aster (Colorado State University) and Brandon Schmandt (University of New Mexico.)  +
Come join your geomorphology colleagues in the mid-Atlantic corridor for an informal sharing of ideas, research, and scholarship. This is an early-career-friendly gathering. Graduate students are welcome, and a poster session will be devoted to graduate student research.  +
Computational science complements the classical paradigm of theory and observation, and leads where neither is available. In particular, computational models play an essential role in diagnosis and prognosis of all elements of the Earth System, from solar variablity through space weather, geomechanics, terrestrial climate and weather, down to ground water flow. This inaugural four-day Conference on Frontiers in Computational Physics will provide a forum for exchanging and sharing experiences, knowledge and on advanced computational techniques, methods, and models for simulation of the Earth System.With computational aspects in focus, the physical emphasis is on natural problems that are complex, coupled and multiscale.  +
Conference Info: The application of seismic techniques to the study of Earth surface processes is a rapidly growing field. However, the field is relatively new and inherently multidisciplinary. As a consequence, no platform currently exists for the exchange of ideas amongst the growing number of seismologists, geomorphologists, glaciologists, hydrologists, volcanologists, geotechnical engineers, and other Earth surface scientists who are using or want to use seismic techniques. The upcoming EGU Galileo conference, “From process to signal – advancing environmental seismology” aims to be a starting point for an increasingly organized and effective international research community in environmental seismology. If you are interested, please see the conference website for additional information: http://www.egu-galileo.eu/gc1-enviroseis/ Travel Support for potential U.S. participants: There are a small number of opportunities for scientists traveling from U.S. institutions to receive travel support (made possible by a U.S. National Science Foundation grant). If you wish to be considered for this NSF travel support you must specifically mention it in your abstract submission email, which requires a research abstract and a short explanation of the reasons why you seek to participate in the conference. Your intent to apply for NSF travel support should be mentioned in your statement explaining your interest in the conference. Early career scientists will be prioritized for travel support, but more senior applicants are also eligible. The deadline for abstract submission and application for travel support is March 13th, 2017. Please see the conference website for more detailed instructions. Applicants for travel support will be informed of whether or not they will receive travel funds by April 1st, 2017.  +