Meeting:Abstract 2011 CSDMS meeting-014: Difference between revisions

From CSDMS
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<!--{{CSDMS meeting program template
|CSDMS meeting first hydrological choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting first terrestrial choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting first coastal choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting first marine choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting second marine choice=Delft3D
|CSDMS meeting first carbonate choice=Cyclopath
|CSDMS meeting first tool choice=I am not interested
}}-->
{{CSDMS meeting personal information template
{{CSDMS meeting personal information template
|CSDMS meeting first name=Chris
|CSDMS meeting first name=Chris
Line 19: Line 28:
}}
}}
{{blank line template}}
{{blank line template}}
<!--{{CSDMS meeting program template
{{CSDMS meeting program template1
|CSDMS meeting first hydrological choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting first day choice=I can not attend a clinic
|CSDMS meeting first terrestrial choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting second day choice=Cyclopath - CarboCAT
|CSDMS meeting first coastal choice=I am not interested
|CSDMS meeting third day choice=I can not attend a clinic
|CSDMS meeting first marine choice=I am not interested
}}
|CSDMS meeting second marine choice=Delft3D
|CSDMS meeting first carbonate choice=Cyclopath
|CSDMS meeting first tool choice=I am not interested
}}-->
{{CSDMS meeting logistics template
{{CSDMS meeting logistics template
|Attend all days=Yes
|Attend all days=Yes

Revision as of 13:41, 6 October 2011

"USA" is not in the list (Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, ...) of allowed values for the "Country member" property.

Browse  abstracts

CSDMS all hands meeting 2011

Temporal-spatial features of Biologically-Based Carbonate Modeling

Chris Jenkins, instaar boulder Colorado, . chris.jenkins@colorado.edu



[[Image:|300px|right|link=File:]]A new class of models based on population ecology, nutrient-geochemistry, and sedimentology is able to simulate carbonate accretion in reef and shelf environments. Unlike previous models for carbonates, they produce very detailed simulations of facies variabilities in space and time. With adjustments to the model runs the range of variabilities can be explored and described statistically. We look at comparisons of the statistics from the models and in outcrops/drillcores of carbonate rocks and ecological transects of present-day seabed areas.