MeetingOfInterest:Meeting-410

From CSDMS

SZ4D Land- and Sea-scapes Webinar
Virtual, United States
26 - 26 June 2020
Common Cross Section of a Subduction Zone.jpg
Dear Colleagues,

Alison Duvall and I would like you to participate in an upcoming webinar from the Subduction Zones in 4D (SZ4D) Landscapes and Seascapes working group, to be held on June 26, 2020 at 11AM PDT. The SZ4D, or Subduction Zones in Four Dimensions effort is a research-community driven initiative in the U.S. to investigate the processes that underlie subduction zone hazards. An NSF-funded planning group is now working to map out a potential decadal-scale program in integrated science of subduction and seeks wide community input.

In this one-hour webinar, you will learn what SZ4D is, meet the Landscapes and Seascapes working group, and learn about our efforts to develop a vision and framework to study the impacts of great subduction zone earthquakes and volcanic eruptions on sediment generation and transport and the building and shaping of landscapes and seascapes. There will be ample time reserved for Q&A. We look forward to your suggestions, feedback, and guidance. Come join us!

Pre-Registration is required to join this webinar. You can pre-register at the following address:

https://washington.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAkd-6qrz8qE9OfMiYN16_YXPuIkt7LLgXb

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

There will be an opportunity for questions during the webinar. If you like, you may also pre-submit a question for the webinar using this form, and we will try to address them during the session. There will be a recording of the webinar posted, and so if you can’t make it, we will try to leave you an answer during the webinar.

Finally, some of you may have seen my previous announcement, which was distributed by the Gilbert Club listserv a day after the first SZ4D webinar. Please accept my apologies for the late delivery of the message. If you don’t know about the SZ4D, and are interested in learning about the broad vision of the effort and how surface processes plays a role in the SZ4D, you can view the recorded webinar at:

https://www.sz4d.org/webinar1

Best,
Alison Duvall and George Hilley



George Hilley
Department of Geological Sciences
Stanford University
Braun Hall, Building 320, Room 233
450 Serra Mall
Stanford, CA 94305-2115

email: hilley@stanford.edu
phone: (650) 723-2782

fax: (650) 725-0979


Of interest for:
  • Terrestrial Working Group
  • Geodynamics Focus Research Group
  • River Network Modeling Initiative