From estherjames at g.harvard.edu Tue Jul 5 22:15:00 2022 From: estherjames at g.harvard.edu (James, Esther) Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2022 08:15:00 -0400 Subject: [Geodynamics] ED034. Undergraduate Students Sharing in the Geosciences: Promoting Scientific Research Collaborations Across Disciplines Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, The American Geophysical Union Annual Meeting returns for fall 2022 both in-person in Chicago, IL and virtually from December 12th ? 16th, 2022. We?re calling on undergraduate students to submit an abstract to our session, ED034. Undergraduate Students Sharing in the Geosciences: Promoting Scientific Research Collaborations Across Disciplines (see details below). We hope you will join us to present either in-person or virtually in December. We encourage anyone (e.g. faculty, researchers, graduate students, undergraduate coordinators, etc.) to forward this info to undergraduate students. The deadline for abstract submission is August 3. - To submit an abstract to our session, please visit: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/vmgsCmO5glu5GvZoLIOef85?domain=agu.confex.com - For instructions on submitting an abstract, please visit: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/vP-YCnx1jniGQnzZpcNEudO?domain=agu.confex.com - Note that there are reduced cost registration fees for students coming from low and lower middle income countries. For more information on this, please visit: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/u31OCoV1kpfXJkMVph61cQr?domain=agu.org Session description: ED034. Undergraduate Students Sharing in the Geosciences: Promoting Scientific Research Collaborations Across Disciplines (link to session: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/z93-Cp81lrtzP5G0EfJv6ti?domain=agu.confex.com Undergraduate research opportunities in the geosciences provide experiences where students can engage in meaningful relationships with faculty mentors. Students also gain much from interactions with other students across disciplines as valuable feedback is exchanged and connections made, possibly leading to professional collaboration. This session invites undergraduates to share their research on topics across the geosciences as we highlight the work of undergraduate students and their research facilitators. We encourage successful multidisciplinary projects that provide increased opportunities for research collaborations either with fellow students or with mentors. We look forward to learning about your work in December! Best regards, Esther James, Harvard University Jeffrey A Battaglia, Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University Esther K. James, Ph.D. Department Preceptor Earth and Planetary Sciences | Harvard University 24 Oxford Street, Rm 101a, Cambridge, MA 02138 Email: estherkjames at fas.harvard.edu Pronouns: she/her/hers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From estherjames at g.harvard.edu Wed Jul 6 00:00:00 2022 From: estherjames at g.harvard.edu (James, Esther) Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2022 10:00:00 -0400 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU 2022 Session DI008 - Constraining the Thermal Structure in the Upper Mantle with Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Multiple Datasets Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, The American Geophysical Union Annual Meeting returns for fall 2022 both in-person in Chicago, IL and virtually from December 12th ? 16th, 2022. We invite you to please consider submitting your abstract to our session, *DI008. Constraining the Thermal Structure in the Upper Mantle with Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Multiple Datasets*, and joining us either in-person or virtually in December. We hope to host a vibrant session where we'll learn of various approaches of investigating processes contributing to the evolution of the upper mantle. We also encourage and would appreciate you forwarding this opportunity to potentially interested fellow scientists. *The deadline for abstract submission is August 3*. - To submit an abstract to our session, please visit: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/O_WkCmO5glu5Gv7o3fOWcHH?domain=agu.confex.com - For instructions on submitting an abstract, please visit: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/O0pWCnx1jniGQn1Z2HNloFk?domain=agu.confex.com *Session description:* Constraining the Thermal Structure in the Upper Mantle with Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Multiple Datasets (link to session: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/E2dPCoV1kpfXJk1VRI6kUc-?domain=agu.confex.com The thermal evolution of the oceanic upper mantle has long been explored with seismic tomographic methods such as those that use surface wave phase velocities, surface wave shear velocities, and body wave travel times. Ambient seismic noise datasets have been proven to significantly improve the resolution of source-derived seismic images of oceanic lithosphere, allowing us to put important constraints on physical properties of the mantle. To complement information obtained from seismological methods, other methods such as petrology, geochemistry, and geophysical modeling must be considered. In this session, we invite contributions from geophysical methods, geodynamic modeling, geochemistry, and multidisciplinary approaches, to provide a comprehensive picture of processes in the upper mantle and advance our understanding of the evolution of oceanic upper mantle. We look forward to learning more about your work in December! Best regards, Esther James, Harvard University Jeffrey A Battaglia, Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University Jonny Wu, University of Houston Jung-Hun Song, Seoul National University Esther K. James, Ph.D. Department Preceptor Earth and Planetary Sciences | Harvard University 24 Oxford Street, Rm 101a, Cambridge, MA 02138 Email: estherkjames at fas.harvard.edu Pronouns: she/her/hers -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ptackley at gmail.com Fri Jul 8 19:45:47 2022 From: ptackley at gmail.com (Paul Tackley) Date: Fri, 8 Jul 2022 11:45:47 +0200 Subject: [Geodynamics] Registration deadline: 2022 EGU Ada Lovelace Mantle & Lithosphere Workshop Message-ID: <869AC980-EFAB-414A-B4B3-8FFCBDB2E00F@gmail.com> Dear colleagues, Registration for on-site attendance of the 2022 Ada Lovelace workshop will close after 15th July! This is a hybrid meeting so we encourage those of you not attending in person to register for online attendance. Registration for online attendance will remain open until the workshop. Travel support for US-based early-career scientists is available from CIG (Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics). Further information about the workshop can be found at the following links and below: Overview: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/GFVhCyojxQTNEVlQqSZ9bJr?domain=meetings.copernicus.org Programme: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/lqs5CzvkyVCRvV0yQfXPoNz?domain=meetings.copernicus.org Venus: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/3V8qCANpgjC9MqvPLh91Wtl?domain=meetings.copernicus.org Registration: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/FUPbCBNqjlCV32gkphjQcGO?domain=meetings.copernicus.org The 2022 EGU Ada Lovelace Workshop on Numerical Modelling of Mantle and Lithosphere Dynamics will be held in H?v?z, Hungary from 28 August?2 September 2022. This is the latest in a series of workshops held since 1987, normally every two years. Previously known as International Workshops on Mantle and Lithosphere Dynamics, the series was renamed in 2018 by the EGU Topical Events Committee in honour of the 19th century English mathematician Ada Lovelace. The 2022 workshop will be co-organized by ETH Zurich and Eotvos Lorand University, Hungary, and will take place at the Ensana Thermal H?v?z Health Spa Hotel in H?v?z, Hungary, about 200 km from Budapest. The meeting is co-sponsored by the European Geosciences Union (EGU), the International Lithosphere Program (ILP) and the ETH Zurich. The following themes will be covered: Early Earth, Global dynamics and evolution, Crust and lithosphere, Planets and exoplanets, Subduction and spreading, Rheology, and Numerical advances. For questions or to be put on the mailing list, send an email to: ada.lovelace.workshop at gmail.com Feel free to forward this to your colleagues! Best regards, Paul Paul Tackley, on behalf of all organisers ETH Zurich -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From xiyuanbao at g.ucla.edu Fri Jul 22 05:27:12 2022 From: xiyuanbao at g.ucla.edu (XIYUAN BAO) Date: Thu, 21 Jul 2022 12:27:12 -0700 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU 2022 session: DI002 - Advances in mantle convection and planetary evolution Message-ID: Dear All, Please consider submitting an abstract to our session: DI002 - Advances in mantle convection and planetary evolution https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/hxPTCNLJyQUNnV2R3FmdWEU?domain=agu.confex.com for the upcoming AGU Fall Meeting. We encourage submissions from a wide variety of fields, including geophysics, geodynamics, seismology, geochemistry, or geomorphology. Abstracts are due August 3rd. Session Description: Mantle dynamics involves complex rheological and material properties, which are difficult to constrain experimentally or model. It also couples in complex ways with the lithosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere and even biosphere across a range of spatial and temporal scales. Therefore, constraining models of mantle dynamics requires careful integration with various geological and geophysical datasets that account for such complexities. This session invites submissions using novel approaches to tackle these challenges. Examples include, but are not limited to, machine learning or surrogate approaches to massively accelerate forward modeling, inversion and data assimilation of fluid mechanics or material properties; high fidelity/high resolution analog experiments; coupled models of mantle evolution and surface processes; and data mining of hidden links between geological/geochemical/geophysical records and mantle dynamics. We encourage submissions that integrate advances from multiple disciplines, including geochemistry, mineral and rock physics, seismology, geomorphology and geodynamics. Invited Speakers: Nicholas Flament, University of Wollongong Rita Parai, Washington University in St. Louis On behalf of conveners, Xiyuan Bao, Max Rudolph, Siavash Ghelichkhan, and Brad Foley Xiyuan Bao *Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences* *University of California, Los Angeles* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From manuele.faccenda at gmail.com Fri Jul 22 17:41:51 2022 From: manuele.faccenda at gmail.com (Manuele Faccenda) Date: Fri, 22 Jul 2022 09:41:51 +0200 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU 2022: Submit an abstract to session DI012 - Seismic Anisotropy and Mantle Dynamics: Observations, Models, and Experiments Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We would like to invite you to submit an abstract to our session on, "D12 - Seismic Anisotropy and Mantle Dynamics: Observations, Models, and Experiments" that will take place at the 2022 AGU Fall Meeting on 12-16 December in-person (Chicago, IL) and online. Please see below for a detailed description of the session. Additional details and abstract submission instructions may be found here: < https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/oRHRCL7EwMfPom0lPtBZ0hC?domain=agu.confex.com> We look forward to seeing your research! Sincerely, Brandon VanderBeek, Manuele Faccenda, Maureen Long, Andrew Birkey, and Poulami Roy Session Abstract Constraining and interpreting the anisotropic properties of the solid Earth is fundamental to understanding mantle dynamics from the lithosphere to the core. The anisotropic structure of Earth's interior reflects its deformation history and the resulting fabrics are sensitive to a host of important properties including pressure and temperature conditions, mineral assemblages, presence of partial melt, and volatile contents. However, constraining and interpreting seismic anisotropy has been a challenge due to the inaccessibility of the mantle and uncertainties in observations, models, and experiments. The growing volume of seismic data together with novel analysis methods has generated increasingly robust measurements of anisotropic properties placing new constraints on lithospheric deformation mechanisms, mantle circulation, plate boundary dynamics, and core-mantle boundary processes. Detailed interpretation of geophysical data is driven by experimental advances targeting the rheology of Earth materials at relevant conditions. At the same time, computational developments allow for the simulation of geologic processes at unprecedented resolution permitting direct comparison to observations. Collaboration between these fields will bring new and exciting insights into the dynamics of our planet's interior. We welcome submissions on the anisotropic properties of the solid earth and their influence on its behavior. Contributions from geophysical and geologic observations (seismology, magnetotellurics, structural analysis of natural samples), geodynamics, and experimental and computational studies on rheology and deformation are encouraged. Best regards Manuele Faccenda, on behalf of the organizing committee -------------------------------------------------------------------- Manuele Faccenda Associate Professor of Solid Earth Geophysics Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Universit? di Padova Via Gradenigo n. 6, 35131, Padova, Italy tel: +39 049 827 9159 Personal website: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/wGbpCMwGxOt5oRpv5uk86ZS?domain=sites.google.com NEWTON project website: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/WaoQCNLJyQUNnEYwNijxszb?domain=newtonproject.geoscienze.unipd.it ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From elvira.mulyukova at northwestern.edu Fri Jul 22 22:56:52 2022 From: elvira.mulyukova at northwestern.edu (Elvira Mulyukova) Date: Fri, 22 Jul 2022 12:56:52 +0000 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU Session MR012 - The Microphysics Of Mantle Flow and Plate Boundary Formation Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, We invite you to submit an abstract to the session on The Microphysics Of Mantle Flow and Plate Boundary Formation (https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/1qwFCWLVXkUjpZlJEu602nQ?domain=agu.confex.com) at the upcoming AGU Fall Meeting in Chicago, IL and Online "Everywhere", 12-16 December 2022. Please see below for a detailed description of the session. Please note that the abstracts are due by August 3. We look forward to seeing you (in-person and online) in Chicago! Best regards, The session conveners, Elvira Mulyukova (Northwestern University) Chhavi Jain (University of Missouri St Louis) Jennifer Girard (Yale University) MR012 - The Microphysics Of Mantle Flow and Plate Boundary Formation Knowing how and why plate tectonics began is critical for understanding Earth?s surface and interior evolution, as well as that of other planets. However, it remains a mystery how forces from the convecting mantle overcome the apparent rheological strength of the lithosphere, and thereby initiate different types of tectonic plate boundaries: rifts, transform faults, and subduction zones. Experimental, theoretical, and modeling studies, as well as observational field data, have generated various hypotheses regarding mechanisms for lithospheric weakening, shear localization, and rheological evolution of plate boundaries both over short (human) and long (planetary) time scales. Microphysical rock deformation processes - including mobility and recovery of crystalline defects, mechanics of faults and fractures, evolution of grain size and the presence of multiple phases or fluids - are of fundamental importance in advancing and testing these hypotheses. This session invites presentations about the development and application of rock mechanics models emerging from theoretical, experimental, numerical and observational field studies, which further our understanding of formation and evolution of plate tectonics. Invited speakers: Dr. Harriet Lau, (UC Berkeley, USA) Dr. Hiroki Sone (UW Madison, USA) ------------------------------------------------------------ Dr. Elvira Mulyukova Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences Northwestern University -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From anna.guelcher at erdw.ethz.ch Sat Jul 23 00:00:29 2022 From: anna.guelcher at erdw.ethz.ch (=?utf-8?B?R8O8bGNoZXIgIEFubmE=?=) Date: Fri, 22 Jul 2022 14:00:29 +0000 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU Session DI015 - Toward an Interdisciplinary Understanding on the Structure, Composition, and Dynamic Evolution of the Lower Mantle Message-ID: <2EDD57BD-E0FF-4C40-94CF-1B81EDBEE0B4@erdw.ethz.ch> Dear colleagues, Please consider submitting an abstract to the following 2022 AGU session on interdisciplinary investigations of Earth's lower mantle. The meeting will be held on Dec 12-16, 2022, in Chicago, USA & Online. Deadline for submission is August 3rd, 2022. DI015: Toward an Interdisciplinary Understanding on the Structure, Composition, and Dynamic Evolution of the Lower Mantle Here you can find the detailed description and submission link: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/N5WSCoV1kpfXo57yjF1F4o9?domain=agu.confex.com Session description: Earth?s lower mantle regulates heat and material fluxes between the surface and the core. The chemistry and physics of this region play an important role in controlling processes like Earth?s early differentiation into the mantle and core, evolution of geochemical reservoirs, fates of subducting slabs and rising plumes, and deep rock/volatile cycling. However, many questions remain about the long-term evolution of the lower mantle and its present-day thermochemical structures, such as large low velocity provinces, ultra-low velocity zones, and regions of seismic anisotropy. Recent advances and future breakthroughs on understanding the lower mantle critically depend on the integration of different fields. In this session, we invite contributions from geophysical explorations, geodynamic modeling, geochemistry, mineral-physics experimental and theoretical studies, as well as multidisciplinary approaches, to provide a platform for interdisciplinary interactions, and thus to advance our understanding of the thermal and chemical status of Earth?s deep interior. Invited presenters: * Hauke Marquardt (The University of Oxford) * Juliane Dannberg (University of Florida) Kind regards from the conveners: Suyu Fu, Neala Creasy, Vasilije Dobrosavljevic, Jyotirmoy Paul, Anna G?lcher -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rgg at rice.edu Sun Jul 24 08:35:27 2022 From: rgg at rice.edu (Richard G Gordon) Date: Sat, 23 Jul 2022 17:35:27 -0500 Subject: [Geodynamics] submit your science to the Frontiers in Paleogeography AGU session! Message-ID: <814b238e-8b38-d56b-5080-75f1d56d36b1@rice.edu> We write to encourage you to submit your research to the AGU Fall Meeting Session *GP004 - Frontiers in Paleogeography (*https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/N0j6Cvl1rKiWB0Y1NuQrS7-?domain=agu.confex.com ). The meeting is being organized in a way to?enable both in-person attendance (in Chicago, IL) or virtual remote attendance. We encourage a broad range of contributions focused on data and/or models across timescales and spatial scales. We look forward to seeing you in person at the meeting or through online participation. *GP004 - Frontiers in Paleogeography* /The time-dependent position of continents and oceans is central to understanding the evolution of Earth's surface and interior. This session seeks contributions that take varied approaches to reconstruct and analyze paleogeography on the regional to global scale across timescales and throughout Earth history. These approaches include those using paleomagnetism, marine geophysical data, geology, seismic tomography, and more. In addition to highlighting research that is furthering the community's ability to reconstruct paleogeography, we welcome contributions that analyze the paleoclimatic and geodynamic implications of paleogeographic models./ Best wishes, Nick Swanson-Hysell and Richard Gordon -- Richard G. Gordon Keck Foundation Professor of Geophysics Dept. of Earth, Environmental, & Planetary Sciences Rice University -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeroen.van-hunen at durham.ac.uk Tue Jul 26 02:05:11 2022 From: jeroen.van-hunen at durham.ac.uk (VAN-HUNEN, JEROEN) Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2022 16:05:11 +0000 Subject: [Geodynamics] GD Session proposals @ EGU 2023 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear all, The call for submitting sessions for EGU2023 has now opened. Please consider submitting a session in the geodynamics (GD) division on the topic of your choice: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/f4wVCzvkyVCRP7wZVu4V27w?domain=meetingorganizer.copernicus.org The deadline for submitting sessions is 19th September. There are 11 different themes for which we would welcome your session contributions: GD1 ? Mantle Dynamics and Plate Tectonics GD2 ? Melts, Volatiles and Chemistry of the Mantle (in partnership with GMPV) GD3 ? Dynamics and Evolution of Earth and Terrestrial Planets (in partnership with PS) GD4 ? Subduction and Orogeny GD5 ? Rifting and Mid Ocean Ridges GD6 ? Crust, Lithosphere and Asthenosphere GD7 ? Rheology and Multiscale Mineralogy in Geodynamics GD8 ? Core Dynamics GD9 ? Geodynamics of Specific Regions GD10 ? Modelling, Data collection and Inversion GD11 ? Geodynamics and society: Short Courses, EDI, and General Interest Please feel free to contact me with any questions you may have. Best wishes, Jeroen van Hunen, on behalf of the EGU GD Science Officers. -- Prof Jeroen van Hunen EGU GD division president Department of Earth Sciences University of Durham Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)191 334 2293 My pronouns are he/him -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ljliu at illinois.edu Tue Jul 26 04:15:10 2022 From: ljliu at illinois.edu (Liu, Lijun) Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2022 18:15:10 +0000 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU 2022 Session on Cratons: T016 - Structure, Tectonics, and Earthquake Hazards of Cratons Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We invite you to contribute to our interdisciplinary session at AGU 2022: T016 - Structure, Tectonics, and Earthquake Hazards of Cratons. With this session, we seek contributions from new data and results across disciplines to help elucidate the structure, tectonics, earthquake hazards, and evolution of cratons. We invite contributions from multiple disciplines, including but not limited to geology, geophysics, geochemistry, rock physics, geochronology, tectonics, and geodynamics, with a particular interest in studies that cross-disciplinary boundaries and/or cross-temporal and spatial scales. The 2022 AGU Fall Meeting will be held in Chicago, Illinois, and online from December 12-16, 2022. The deadline to submit your abstract is 11:59 PM EDT on August 3, 2022. Please check out more about our session and submit your abstract here: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/9p8aCL7EwMfPo7JM4cBAbmy?domain=agu.confex.com . Invited speakers: Reece Elling (Northwestern University) Ling Chen (Institution of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences) We look forward to seeing your abstracts. Best, Xiaotao Yang (Purdue University) Andrea Stevens Goddard (Indiana University Bloomington) Lijun Liu (UIUC) Seth Stein (Northwestern University) ?----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Session ID: 158110 Session Title: T016. Structure, Tectonics, and Earthquake Hazards of Cratons Section: Tectonophysics Link to session: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/9p8aCL7EwMfPo7JM4cBAbmy?domain=agu.confex.com Description: Cratons form the ?stable? cores of continents. While they are generally resilient to destruction and recycling, recent studies from geophysical imaging, geological surveys, geochronological measurements, and geodynamic modeling provide evidence for significant structural and compositional modifications of the cratonic lithosphere. Tectonic features such as basins, rifts, faults and folds, arches, and domes existing across cratons also require changes in the geodynamic states of the lithosphere ?post-cratonizaton?. Abundant intraplate seismicity suggests that some of these structures are active today. Cratons, from their interiors to the margins, provide an ideal setting to address a variety of topics on the dynamics and stability of continental lithosphere, most effectively done through cross-disciplinary collaborations. This AGU session aims to facilitate sharing of new data and results across disciplines to help elucidate the structure, tectonics, earthquake hazards, and evolution of cratons. We invite contributions from multiple disciplines, including but not limited to geology, geophysics, geochemistry, rock physics, geochronology, tectonics, and geodynamics, with a particular interest in studies that cross-disciplinary boundaries and/or cross-temporal and spatial scales. Invited speakers: Reece Elling (Northwestern University) Ling Chen (Institution of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences) Primary section: Tectonophysics Cross-listed: V - Volcanology, Geochemistry and Petrology S - Seismology NH - Natural Hazards DI - Study of the Earth's Deep Interior Conveners: Xiaotao Yang (primary), Andrea Stevens Goddard, Lijun Liu, Seth Stein ----------- Lijun Liu Professor, Department of Geology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801 Email: ljliu at illinois.edu; Tel: 217-300-0378. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 1608 bytes Desc: not available URL: From k.ofarrell at uky.edu Fri Jul 29 02:59:38 2022 From: k.ofarrell at uky.edu (O'Farrell, Keely A.) Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2022 16:59:38 -0000 Subject: [Geodynamics] AGU fall session: DI009 Exploring multi-scale mantle dynamics with computational methods Message-ID: Dear Colleagues, Please consider submitting an abstract to our session: DI009. Exploring multi-scale mantle dynamics with computational methods Session description: The dynamics and evolution of Earth's mantle are governed by structures and processes interacting on a wide range of scales: long- wavelength mantle convection and large thermochemical structures are intimately linked with small-scale processes in the boundary layers, and understanding the effective properties of mantle rocks require insights on the mineral scale. These processes are not only multi-scale spatially but also act over strongly different timescales. Understanding the Earth's mantle across these scales is a problem typically outside the range of analytical solutions. The application of numerical methods to capture vastly different scales and the development of clever parameterisations to tackle this multi-scale problem are necessary. This session will explore the link between Earth's mantle processes operating on different spatial and/or temporal scales. We invite contributions from various disciplines including geodynamics, seismology, mineral physics, and that highlight computational advances in tackling dynamical problems that span scales in time and space. Invited speakers: Anna G?lcher, ETH Zurich Both in-person (in Chicago) and online participation are possible due to the hybrid format of the meeting. Deadline for abstract submission is 3rd August 2022, 23:59 EDT/03:59 +1 GMT. You can find more information and submit your abstract to this session at: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/5I0YClx1Njiog5j3piGZskV?domain=agu.confex.com On behalf of conveners, Keely O'Farrell, Juliane Dannberg, Tobias Rolf, Denise Degen and Federico Munch ******************************************* Dr. Keely O?Farrell (Pronouns: she/her/hers) Assistant Professor Dept. of Earth & Environmental Sciences 108B Slone Research Building University of Kentucky k.ofarrell at uky.edu 859-323-4876 (office) Organizer: International Geophysics&Tectonics Seminar (bit.ly/GT-seminar) Note: My working house may not be your working hours. Please don't feel obliged to respond to this email outside of your regular working hours. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: