[Aqualist] AGU session: d13C and biomarkers
Christopher Brodie
c.r.brodie at durham.ac.uk
Wed Jun 15 16:59:31 EST 2011
Dear List members,
We would like to draw your attention to our inter-disciplinary session (see below) at this years AGU Fall Meeting (December 2011) in San Francisco, CA. The deadline for abstract submission is 4th August 2011 (around 2 months from now). Abstracts are being accepted from now until then.
Session Title: Modern Insights Into the Paleo-carbon Cycle: *13C and a Biomarker Perspective
Convenors: Chris Brodie (Durham University, UK/Hong Kong University); James Casford (Durham University, UK); Erin McClymont (Newcastle University, UK); Melanie Leng (NIGL, UK).
Description:
Understanding the carbon cycle is central to constraining environmental processes from biological productivity to palaeo environmental interpretations. Rigorously quantifying these processes at different spatial and temporal scales requires an integrative inter-disciplinary approach. This session aims to bring together ecologists, biochemists, palaeoclimatologists and geochemists that use bulk and compound specific δ13C and biomarker distributions in marine and terrestrial environments. We particularly encourage contributions investigating biological productivity (i.e. photosynthesis); carbon fluxes; diagenesis and soil processes; the use of carbon to investigate modern and palaeo-environments; and method development.
Link: http://sites.agu.org/fallmeeting/scientific-program/session-search/92
Confirmed Speakers:
Prof. Philip Meyers (Michigan, USA)
Dr. Jennifer Dungait (BBSRC, UK)
Abstract submission can be done via http://agu-fm11.abstractcentral.com/
Student Travel Grant Applications: https://www.agu.org/education/grants/travel.shtml
We are very keen to receive abstracts from researchers working in modern through to palaeo, terrestrial and aquatic environments using bulk and compound specific δ13C and biomarker distributions across all disciplines. We hope that this session will be of interest to many users of this forum (and others not on this list, so please do pass this on to any colleagues you think may be interested). We are very open to all strands of research utilising these proxies to gain an insight into modern and palaeo processes, and the caveats in the scientific understanding from an inter-disciplinary perspective.
All the best,
Dr. Chris Brodie
Dr. James Casford
Dr. Erin McClymont
Prof. Melanie Leng
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