[Aqualist] INQUA 2027: AQUA session

Jasper Knight Jasper.Knight at wits.ac.za
Wed Dec 17 14:57:40 AEDT 2025


Likewise colleagues there is also session S_043 under "Theme -7: Synthesis-Data and Modelling" on Warm intervals in the Southern Hemisphere (WiSH) from MIS 5 to 1, co-convened by myself and a host of Australasian people...
Abstract submission opens in 15 Dec. https://www.inquaindia2027.in/calls-submissions

Thanks, Jasper


-----Original Message-----
From: Aqualist <aqualist-bounces at anu.edu.au> On Behalf Of Tim Barrows via Aqualist
Sent: Wednesday, 17 December 2025 01:57
To: Aqualist <aqualist at anu.edu.au>
Subject: [Aqualist] INQUA 2027: AQUA session

Dear members,

Sessions have been posted for the INQUA 2027 meeting in India.

The registration section says abstracts are due 31st January, 2026

AQUA's session has been accepted. This is a general session classed as a "Regional Synthesis".

To select this session, choose "Synthesis-Data and Modelling" then the session title:

Quantifying climate change in Australasia: challenges and Opportunities

Lead Convener
Tim Barrows

Co-Conveners
Lydia Mackenzie, Kat Fitzsimmons, Teresa Dixon, Calla Gould-Whaley, Juliet Sefton

Session description:
Australasia occupies an important zone at the confluence of the Pacific, Indian and Southern Oceans. Environments in the region range from tropical rainforest, to deserts, mountains, subantarctic islands and tundra. The deserts of central Australia are an important feature that have contracted and expanded through time, as have the temperate forests and grasslands. This vast array of ecosystems presents significant challenges for finding records of climate change that are both spatially representative and temporally continuous. This leaves some major gaps for reconstructing environments and quantifying past climate variability as a basis from which to compare present-day and future climate change. Continuous paleoclimate records can be found in lakes, wetlands, speleothems, and deep marine environments, but many areas only provide fragmentary records in the form of moraines, sand dunes, fluvial deposits and lake shorelines. This session will focus on new records that address!
  these challenges for understanding climate and environmental change in Australia, Aotearoa-New Zealand, and Oceania. We invite presentations that improve existing chronologies or that discuss climate or environmental proxies, particularly studies that provide new insights or provide quantitative records. We particularly welcome presentations on cold intervals and records from the last glacial maximum through to the late Holocene.

Looking forward to seeing you there.

Tim


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