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Optional: May 22<sup>th</sup> 2017, [[Form:Annualmeeting#Pre-conference one-day Software Carpentry bootcamp|pre-conference bootcamp]]<br><br>
Optional: May 22<sup>nd</sup> 2017, [[Form:Annualmeeting#Pre-conference one-day Software Carpentry bootcamp|pre-conference bootcamp]]<br><br>
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Optional: May 26<sup>th</sup> 2017, [[Form:Annualmeeting#Post-conference Hackathon|post-conference Hackathon]]<br><br>
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=Registration=
=Registration=
Registration opens mid January.
Registration opens mid January.

Revision as of 14:08, 9 January 2017

CSDMS annual meeting Modeling Coupled Earth and Human Systems - The Dynamic Duo



Optional: May 22nd 2017, pre-conference bootcamp



Optional: May 26th 2017, post-conference Hackathon

Registration

Registration opens mid January. The online conference registration is a three step process:

Step 1:

  • Log in
Log in (or create account for non-CSDMS members)
Forgot username? Search or email:CSDMSweb@colorado.edu

Step 2:

  • Register
  • Abstract submission

Step 3:

  • Academia or Government, registration fee: $300 (After April 1st: $300)
  • Industry, registration fee: $1,600 (After April 1st: $1,600)
  • Add $30 when joining pre-conference bootcamp
    Third party website
Pay button.png

Note 1: You only are successfully registered by fulfilling the above steps
Note 2: Do you want to make changes to you abstract?

  1. Log in.
  2. Select your registration record in "participants" and start making changes by clicking "Edit registration".




Objectives and general description

The CSDMS 2017 annual meeting will focus on “Modeling Coupled Earth and Human Systems”. Topics of interests also include modeling research that integrate different disciplines, different scales, and the synergy between models and Human Systems. As in past meetings, keynote speakers are by invitation only, and poster presentations are the general media. The meeting will include:

  1. State-of-the art keynote presentations in earth-surface dynamics and modeling
  2. Hands-on clinics related to community models, tools and approaches
  3. Transformative software products and approaches designed to be accessible, easy to use, and relevant
  4. Breakout sessions for Working, Focus Research Groups and the Initiatives
  5. Poster Sessions

and more!

Poster Information: The poster boards are configured for 4' wide by 6' tall (portrait orientation) posters. The deadline to submit abstracts is April 1, 2017.

Agenda

Click here to view the draft agenda of 00/00/2017.

Keynote Speakers

As of now:

Laura Moore
UNC, Department of Geological Sciences
Will come
Will come
Kim de Mutsert
GMU, Department of Environmental Science and Policy
Will come
Will come
Scott Hagen
LSU, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering
Will come
Will come
Michael Young
UT, Bureau of Economic Geology
Improving soil models by connecting scientific disciplines
Michael H. Young1, Kris van Looy2, Harry Vereecken2, Martine van der Ploeg3
1 Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin
2 Agrosphere Inst., IBG-3, Inst. of Bio-geosciences, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
3 Department of Soil Physics and Land Management, Wageningen University & Research

Soil science has developed as a critical discipline of the biosphere and continues to develop every day; yet state-of-the-art modeling is unable to adequately synthesize many processes in applied earth system models. If we agree that soil is a critical life-supporting compartment that supports ecosystem functions (e.g., habitat for biodiversity) and ecosystem services (e.g., water filtration, nutrient management), and that produces food, feed, fiber and energy for our societies, then our inability to integrate soil processes into the broader array of earth system models is an issue that needs solving. Integration is an achievable goal. Other research communities have collaborated intensively over the past decades—specifically the climate modeling community—but even many of their approaches overlook (or over-average) the detailed and advanced shared knowledge of the soil compartment. This represents a gap in how scientific knowledge is implemented. Over the recent decades, a new generation of soil models has been developed, based on a whole systems approach comprising all physical, mechanical, chemical, and biological processes. The processes are needed to fill these critical knowledge gaps and contribute to the preservation of ecosystem function, improve our understanding of climate-change feedback processes, bridge basic soil science research and management, and facilitate the communication between science and society. The International Soil Modeling Consortium (ISMC) was formed in 2016 as a new community effort of soil modelers to improve how soil processes are communicated to other scientific communities, from earth dynamics to biogeosciences to global climate modelers. ISMC was formed around three themes: linking data and observations to models; creating the means for soil model intercomparison studies; and connecting our soil-related knowledge between science communities. Within less than 12 months of inception, ISMC has warehoused nearly 40 soil-related models, initiated data sets and platforms for modeling studies, and facilitated collaborations with several international groups, including CSDMS. In this discussion, we will describe the motivation and genesis of ISMC, present current status of our research, and seek to create new research partnerships.
Alison Duvall
UT, Department of Earth and Space Sciences
Cascadia subduction zone earthquakes and landslides - How will the hillslopes handle the big one?
The last decade has provided unexpected lessons in the enormous risks from great subduction earthquakes: Sumatra 2004, Chile 2010, and Japan 2011 were each devastating, resulting in surprising impacts distinct from shallow seismic events. Similar large-magnitude earthquakes are known to occur on the Cascadia subduction zone (CSZ), with the potential of rupturing the entire 1100 km length of the Pacific Northwest plate boundary. Coseismic landslides represent one of the greatest risks to the millions of people living along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, from northern California to southern British Columbia. Empirically derived relationships between earthquake magnitude and landsliding suggest a magnitude 9 earthquake is likely to trigger thousands of landslides. Because a magnitude 9 subduction earthquake is well known to have occurred just over 300 years ago, evidence of coseismic landslides triggered by this event should still be present in the landscapes of the Washington and Oregon Coasts. We are systematically hunting for these landslides through field and LiDAR mapping and are using a combination of radiocarbon dating and surface roughness analysis, a method first developed to study landslides near to the Oso 2014 disaster site, to develop more robust regional landslide chronologies. In addition, we compare our results to new modeling that includes probabilistic quantification of ground motions from M9 earthquakes, and the predicted landslide response to these synthetic seismograms. With these new data, we hope to better characterize how the landscape will respond to the next large subduction zone earthquake in the Pacific Northwest.
John Gilligan
Vanderbilt , Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
Will come
Will come
Moira Zellner
UIC, Department of Urban Planning and Policy
Will come
Will come
David Gochis
UCAR, Research Applications Laboratory
Process linkages in the WRF-Hydro/NOAA National Water Model: Different processes operating on different scales
The community WRF-Hydro system has evolved from a basic land surface modeling scheme for atmospheric models into a more comprehensive operational hydrologic prediction system.  Key to this evolution was explicit accounting for the need to represent different processes at different scales or with different types of spatial representations. The most recent evolution of the WRF-Hydro system was its implementation as the modeling system supporting the new NOAA National Water Model which become officially operational in August of 2016. This presentation will discuss the different kinds of configurations utilized within the NOAA National Water Model (NWM) and how the WRF-Hydro system was adapted to meet those requirements.   Specific emphasis will be placed on describing the spatial transformations and flux passing methods that were required to maintain coupling between different parts of the forecasting system.  Also discussed will be future work that is planned to enable new process representations within the NWM and how modeling approaches under the CSDMS has influenced this development.


Clinic Leaders

Tuesday (1st day)

Irina Overeem & Mark Piper
CU, CSDMS-IF
{{{participants}}}
Bringing CSDMS Models into the Classroom
CSDMS has developed a Web-based Modeling Tool – the WMT. WMT allows users to select models, to edit model parameters, and run the model on the CSDMS High-Performance Computing System. The web tool makes it straightforward to configure different model components and run a coupled model simulation. Users can monitor progress of simulations and download model output.

CSDMS has designed educational labs that use the WMT to teach quantitative concepts in geomorphology, hydrology, coastal evolution and coastal sediment transport. These labs are intended for use by Teaching assistants and Faculty alike. Descriptions of 2 to 4-hr hands-on labs have been developed for HydroTrend, Plume, Sedflux, CHILD, TOPOFLOW and ROMS-Lite. These labs include instructions for students to run the models and explore dominant parameters in sets of simulations. Learning objectives are split between topical concepts, on climate change and sediment transport amongst many others, and modeling strategies, modeling philosophy and critical assessment of model results.

In this clinic, we will provide an overview of the available models and labs, and their themes and active learning objectives. We will discuss the requirements and logistics of using the WMT in your classroom. We will run some simulations hands-on, and walk through one lab in more detail as a demonstration. Finally, the workshop intends to discuss future developments for earning assessment tools with the participants.
Irina Overeem1 & Elchin Jafarov2 & Kang Wang1
1) CU, CSDMS-IF
2) LANL

Modeling Permafrost; a new software toolbox to explore frozen grounds
Permafrost is one of the Arctic climate indicators, and feedback of thawing permafrost to the global climate system through the impacts on the carbon cycle remains an important research topic. Observations can assess the current state of permafrost, but models are eventually essential to make predictions of future permafrost state.
In this 2hr clinic, we will present a new, easy-to-access and comprehensive cyberinfrastructure for permafrost modeling. The ‘PermaModel Integrated Modeling Toolbox’ includes three permafrost models of increasing complexity. The IMT is embedded within the Community Surface Dynamics Modeling System Web Modeling Tool (WMT). We include multiple sets of sample inputs, representing a variety of climate and soil conditions and locations, to enable immediate use of the IMT.
The hands-on clinic teaches students and researchers how to run and use several permafrost models. The presented models are envisioned to be the suitable for quick exploration of hypotheses and for teaching purposes.
Jean-Arthur Olive
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
SiSteR
Coming
Greg Tucker
CU, Department of Geological Sciences
LandLab and Dakota
Coming

Wednesday (2nd day)

Mariela Perignon
CU, CSDMS-IF
ANUGA - An open-source model of river flood morphodynamics (and other hydrological disasters)
ANUGA is an open source software package capable of simulating small-scale hydrological processes such as dam breaks, river flooding, storm surges and tsunamis. Thanks to its modular structure, we’ve incorporated additional components to ANUGA that allow it to model suspended sediment transport and vegetation drag. ANUGA is a Python-language model that solves the Shallow Water Wave Equation on an unstructured triangular grid and can simulate shock waves and rapidly changing flows. It was developed by the Australian National University and Geosciences Australia and has an active developer and user community.

This clinic will provide a hands-on introduction to hydrodynamic modeling using ANUGA. We will discuss the structure and capabilities of the model as we build and run increasingly complex simulations. No previous knowledge of Python is required. Example input files will be provided and participants will be able to explore the code and outputs at their own pace.
Reed Maxwell
CSM, Department of Geology and Geological Engineering
Parflow
Coming
Tatiana Filatova
University of Twente, Faculty of Behavioral, Management and Social sciences
ABM
Coming

Thursday (3rd day)

Raleigh Martin
University of California, Los Angeles
The Sediment Experimentalist Network (SEN) Knowledge Base
The Sediment Experimentalist Network (SEN) integrates the efforts of sediment experimentalists to build a Knowledge Base for guidance on best practices for data collection and management. The network facilitates cross-institutional collaborative experiments and communicates with the research community about data and metadata guidelines for sediment-based experiments. This effort aims to improve the efficiency and transparency of sedimentary research for field geologists and modelers as well as experimentalists.

The purpose of this clinic is to familiarize participants, experimentalists and modelers alike, with how to use and contribute to the SEN Knowledge Base (SEN-KB, www.sedexp.net). SEN-KB provides a wiki-like forum for sharing information on experimental methods, equipment, set-ups, and facilities. It also serves as a portal for discovery of datasets tied to the descriptions of experimental techniques. Such datasets are not hosted on SEN-KB; rather, data descriptions are linked to datasets stored on external servers, such as SEAD (“Sustainable Environment Actionable Data”, https://sead2.ncsa.illinois.edu/). SEAD is a resource for storing and curating large (10’s-100’s of GB) experimental datasets, and it provides the capability for submitting these data for publication, issuance of DOIs (“digital object identifiers”), and long-term archiving on disciplinary data repositories.

After a brief introduction to using SEN-KB and SEAD, participants will divide into two groups depending on their interests. The first group of “Data Contributors” will engage in a focused session of contributing new entries and/or editing existing entries on SEN-KB and SEAD based on their own experimental work. The second group of “Data Utilizers” will formulate and begin executing plans for addressing scientific questions of interest based on utilization of existing datasets described on SEN-KB and SEAD, such as those generated at the pre-JpGU Kyoto-SEN workshop (Morphodynamics and Genetic Stratigraphy for Understanding Landforms and Strata) to be held a few days before the clinic. We expect experimentalists to affiliate with the “Data Contributors” group, whereas modelers and other non-experimentalists will affiliate with the “Data Utilizers” group. Nonetheless, participants are open to choose for themselves. Both groups will be guided by SEN-KB leaders on hand to answer questions and document software issues. Toward the end of the clinic, both groups will reconvene to discuss lessons learned a path forward.

Enrollees will be contacted a couple weeks prior to the CSDMS meeting to engage in some brief pre-workshop activities to prepare for the clinic.

Tasks for participants prior to clinic:
  • Fill out survey (edit here).
  • Set up an account on SEN-KB - include in email, remind the day before - http://sedexp.net/
  • You have two choices (1) Click “Create new account” OR (2) “Log in with Google”
  • Set up an account on SEAD
  • Bring laptop to session - remind the day before



Participants

Interested to see who registered for the meeting as of 05/17/2024?




Reimbursement

CSDMSmeeting2017.png

Within its budget, CSDMS intends to support member applicants to attend the annual meeting. Towards this goal, we encourage members to fully or partially cover their expenses if capable. We additionally thank those in the industry and agency fields for understanding that 1) we cannot compensate federal agency participants since our own funding is from NSF, and 2) we request that our industrial/ corporate participants cover their own costs thereby allowing more academic participants to attend.

To the extent possible, CSDMS intends to reimburse the registration fee, lodging (shared rooms at 100% and single rooms at 50% at conference hotels), and a limited amount of travel expenses for qualified registrants - those members who will attend all three days of the meeting and are not industry or federal employees.

Important for foreign travelers requesting reimbursement: If you need a visa to travel to USA, select a business visa. If you need an invitation letter, please email csdms@colorado.edu as soon as possible. Also indicate whether specific wording is required in the letter. Second, we will need to copy the entry stamp in your passport sometime during the meeting as proof that you were here on business as required by US tax laws for reimbursement (especially when dealing with airfare.) We are only able to provide reimbursement for airfare within the U.S. All airfare that is being reimbursed must be for airlines that are U.S. flag carriers.

Travel, Lodging and Conference Center Information

The meeting will be held at SEEC
Hotel: Millennium Harvest House Hotel
Transportation: You can book transportation between DIA and Boulder here: Green Ride Boulder. And information on how to find Green Ride Boulder at DIA.
We will provide a bus between the hotels and the meeting venue each day. We will also provide transportation to the banquet.

Pre-conference one-day Software Carpentry bootcamp

Boots.gif

CSDMS will host a Pre-conference one-day Software Carpentry bootcamp on Monday May 22th, 2017. The objective is to teach basic programming skills that will be useful for scientific computing and model development. This is an intensive, hands-on workshop, during which certified instructors will cover basic elements of:

  1. the Unix bash shell,
  2. Python programming and NumPy, and
  3. Github for version control.

Our instructors are earth scientists and have familiarity with the CSDMS framework, such that lessons and examples will be targeted toward relevant problems in your field. The bootcamp intentionally precedes the CSDMS meeting, so the skills participants develop should be useful in the clinics during the meeting.

Note:

  • Registration is open till April 1st (or until program fill) and is handled through the 2017 meeting site.
  • The bootcamp is capped at 30 participants (first paid first serve), and it has a $30 registration fee.
  • Participant will be responsible for cost / organization of their extra day of hotel accommodation and dinner. Costs will not be reimbursed.
  • We will cover coffee and lunch during the bootcamp.



Student Scholarships

This year CSDMS is offering a limited number of scholarships (up to 12) for graduate students to attend the CSDMS annual meeting. Three of the 12 scholarships will be offered for the purpose of increasing participation of underrepresented students. To be eligible, graduate students need to meet the following requirements:

  • Attend the whole meeting (May 23-25, 2017)
  • Submit an abstract
  • Be enrolled as a graduate student at the time of the meeting (bring proof)
  • Submit a letter of motivation that states why you wish to participate in the meeting, and explain how your participation would enhance diversity in the field of surface dynamics modeling.

Send your application materials to csdms@colorado.edu by March 1, 2017. The CSDMS scholarships will cover:

  • Registration costs
  • Travel (air fare ONLY within the United States and local transport)
  • Per diem to help reimburse the cost of meals from 23-25 May 2017 not offered in the conference schedule



Important dates

  • January 15th: Registration opens
  • March 1st: Deadline for student scholarship applications CSDMS
  • April 1st: Deadline for abstract submission & early registration
  • May 10th: Deadline late registration. Notice additional costs do apply.
  • May 22th: Optional: pre-conference bootcamp
  • May 23-25th: CSDMS annual meeting
  • May 26th: CSDMS Executive and Steering committees meeting (by invitation only)


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