Got to visit an extremely unique place known as Montezuma Well on my ride yesterday. I learned that only five species of animals exist in the Weel’s water due to high levels of dissolved carbon dioxide. A harbinger of future times? pic.twitter.com/qNTDOYR8d4— Chad Davies (@chaddavies) December 21, 2019
Though set for any device, a laptop/tablet for a better experience is advised. See all HR resources could take a few minutes depending on your internet.
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Montezuma Well
A robust calibration of the clumped isotopes to temperature relationship for foraminifers - Geochimica and Cosmochimica Acta
A robust calibration of the clumped-isotopes-to-temperature relationship for foraminifers - Meinicke, @ClumpedIsotopes, Meckler et al. https://t.co/V9iBMUz6F2! pic.twitter.com/KN3FcOyr6W— Kaustubh Thirumalai (@holy_kau) November 30, 2019
Historical perspectives on marine ecosystems, fisheries, and futures - Belgium 2020
Rationale: Life in the oceans is changing more rapidly in the current century than ever before. As these changes occur it is more imperative than ever to understand what came before to better frame management of those systems. Oceans Past brings together scholars and practitioners interested in documenting and understanding changes in marine systems and human maritime interactions in past centuries and millennia. The 8th Oceans Past Conference, Historical Perspectives on Marine Ecosystems, Fisheries, and Futures, will enable continued scholarly communication and international exchange towards a fuller understanding of the past, the present status, and potential trajectories of our living marine resources.
Deadline for paper submission: 15 JANUARY 2020
Early Bird registration deadline: 15 FEBRUARY 2020
Abstract Submission
Invitation: The conference welcomes researchers, practitioners, policy-makers and students of all disciplines under the unifying view of our oceans as networks of social-ecological or coupled human-nature systems. Presentations are encouraged that explore large-scale and long-term case studies highlighting dynamic changes and interactions in past marine ecosystems, the impacts and legacy effects of human activities on them, the sustainability of iterative or co-evolutionary relationships and, where possible, likely future directions and management implications. If you have an interest in the history of human interactions with life in the ocean and implications for policy and management, sign up now to attend OP VIII in 2020!
Deadline for paper submission: 15 JANUARY 2020
Early Bird registration deadline: 15 FEBRUARY 2020
Abstract Submission
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