At this year’s AGU Fall Meeting, three hybrid Deep Biosphere sessions – two oral and one poster – will be presented on Friday December 17. Conveners Beth Orcutt, James Bradley, Julie Huber, and Maggie Osburn are delighted to have many early career scientists in these sessions, sharing the latest-and-greatest from continental and marine subsurface investigations. Check the links to see who and what is being presented! I: Oral Session (B53B) Friday 17 Dec 13:45-15:00 CST (UTC-6); II: Oral Session (B54A) Friday 17 Dec 15:30-16:45 CST (UTC-6); and III: Poster Session (B55J) Friday 17 Dec 17:00-19:00 CST (UTC-6). Early bird registration ends November 3, 2021; regular rates are due afterward until the session December 17, 2021.
AGU will be offering grants (averaging $1,000 or less) to scientists around the world to encourage and jump-start outreach and engagement activities that will share science and its value with wider communities, from journalists to policymakers to students to members of the public. The deadline is October 11, 2021.
#AGU21 is the leading forum for advancing Earth and space science and leveraging this research toward solutions for societal challenges. Submit an abstract (or two now) to #AGU21 to contribute to these goals and to share your science in-person (New Orleans, LA) and online with >25,000 attendees from 100+ countries representing the global Earth and space sciences community. Most sessions will be recorded and available to this global community of researchers, scientists, educators, students, policymakers, partners, science enthusiasts, journalists and communicators. Abstracts should focus on new scientific results, enabling Earth and space science or its application, and/or the contribution of Earth and space science to society. Submit your deep biosphere abstract to Session B037 – Geomicrobiology of the Deep Biosphere convened by Beth Orcutt, Maggie Osburn, James Bradley, and Julie Huber; or to Session P034 – Tapping the Rhythms of Potential Life on Extraterrestrial Planets and Moons convened by Chui Yim Maggie Lau Vetter, Frederick S. Colwell, and Rosalyn Fey. Abstracts due August 4, 2021.
Submit a proposal for general scientific sessions, Union and special sessions, town halls, and scientific workshops to help shape discussions at the AGU Fall Meeting 2021 and within the Earth and space sciences community. This year’s Fall Meeting (December 13-17) is planned to be a hybrid in-person (New Orleans) and online meeting. Deadline: April 14, 2021.
The 2021 nomination period is open for AGU honors, including the Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize. The Taira Prize is given annually in recognition of outstanding, transdisciplinary research accomplishment in ocean drilling to an honoree within 15 years of receiving their Ph.D. The Taira Prize is generously funded through the International Ocean DISCOVERY Program and is given in partnership between AGU and the Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU). It is presented at the AGU Fall Meeting. An extended nomination period aims to increase selection and diversity among the nominees and to allow more time for nominators to develop multiple nomination packages. Deadline: April 15, 2021.
Attending the 2020 AGU Fall Meeting, December 1-17, online? Check out these deep biosphere-related sessions:
- B018 – Chemolithotrophs as extreme ecosystem engineers; how microbial communities and environments influence each other under non-standard conditions
- B028 – Evaluating the role of the deep biosphere in the global carbon cycle: novel methodologies and tools from field sampling to lab scale investigations
- B077 – Coupled Elemental Cycles in Microbial Metabolism I Posters
- B091 – Investigating the Role of the Extreme Biosphere in the Global Element Cycles: How Microbial Communities and Environments Influence Each Other in the Deep Subsurface and Beyond II Posters,
B098 – Investigating the Role of the Extreme Biosphere in the Global Element Cycles: How Microbial Communities and Environments Influence Each Other in the Deep Subsurface and Beyond I - B095 – Soils in the Anthropocene: Mechanisms of Stabilization and Change III Posters
- B111 – Geovirology: Viruses in Earth’s Biomes and Their Impacts on Microbial Ecology and Biogeochemistry II Posters,
B124 – Geovirology: Viruses in Earth’s Biomes and Their Impacts on Microbial Ecology and Biogeochemistry I - B113 – Advances in Understanding and Predicting Microbial Functions in Earth System Processes Under Climate Change II Posters
- H081 – Reactive Transport in Real Rocks: From the Pore to the Field Scale I
- H160 – Fluids in the Earth’s Crust: From Depth to Surface I
- OS016 – Seafloor Cold Seeps Dynamics: Local to Global Impacts of Methane Emission and Gas Hydrates on the Marine Environment I Posters
- OS024 – The Science Behind the Framework for Scientific Ocean Drilling Through 2050 II Posters,
OS026 – The Science Behind the Framework for Scientific Ocean Drilling Through 2050 I - OS043 – Hydrocarbon (Methane or Oil) and Carbon Dioxide Seepage into Marine, Lacustrine, and Terrestrial Environments: Emissions and Impacts on Local to Global Scales I Posters
- P055 – The New Mars Underground (and Beyond) 3.0 III Posters,
P057 – The New Mars Underground (and Beyond) 3.0 I,
P058 – The New Mars Underground (and Beyond) 3.0 II - P064 – Getting the Most Out of Data in Astrobiology: Overcoming the Too Little, Too Rare, and Too Different I Posters
- P075 – Ice and Ocean Worlds: Geology, Oceanography, Chemistry, Habitability I,
P076 – Ice and Ocean Worlds: Geology, Oceanography, Chemistry, Habitability IV Posters,
P083 – Ice and Ocean Worlds: Geology, Oceanography, Chemistry, Habitability II,
P086 – Ice and Ocean Worlds: Geology, Oceanography, Chemistry, Habitability III
Missing a session of interest? Let us know!
Attending (virtually or in person) the AGU Fall Meeting, December 7-11, 2020? Consider submitting your abstracts (due July 29, 2020) to these deep biosphere-related Session Proposals:
- B003: Advances in representing microbial functions in ecosystem and Earth system models
Conveners: Yang Song, University of Arizona, Department of Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences, Gangsheng Wang, University of Oklahoma Norman Campus, and Scott R Saleska, University of Arizona, Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology - B018: Chemolithotrophs as extreme ecosystem engineers; how microbial communities and environments influence each other under non-standard conditions
Conveners:Rose Jones, University of Minnesota Twin Cities, and Tomasa Sbaffi, University of Exeter, United Kingdom - B021: Coupled Elemental Cycles in Microbial Metabolism
Conveners:William C Nelson, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Biological Sciences, Jianqiu Zheng, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, and Michael J Wilkins, Colorado State University, Department of Soil and Crop Sciences - B028: Evaluating the role of the deep biosphere in the global carbon cycle: novel methodologies and tools from field sampling to lab scale investigations
Conveners:Anais Cario, CNRS, ICMCB, Bordeaux, France, and Samuel Marre, CNRS, Paris, France - B034: Geovirology: Viruses in Earth’s Biomes and Their Impacts on Microbial Ecology and Biogeochemistry
Conveners:Joanne B Emerson, University of California Davis, Ella Sieradzki, University of California, Berkeley, Simon Roux, Joint Genome Institute, Environmental Genomics, and Gareth George Trubl, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - B039: Integrating molecular insights to advance predictive biogeochemistry: theories, observations and modeling
Conveners:Jianqiu Zheng, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Debjani Sihi, University of Florida, Melanie A Mayes, ORNL, Oak Ridge, TN, and Timothy D Scheibe, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory - ED033: Undergraduate Earth, Atmospheric, Ocean, and Space Science Research and Outreach
Conveners:Andria P Ellis, UNAVCO, Inc. Boulder, Education and Community Engagement, Kadidia V. Thiero, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, Pranoti M. Asher, American Geophysical Union, and Virginia L Peterson, Grand Valley State University - ED035: Virtual and In-Person Educator and Student Research Programs Promoting Authentic Scientific Experience
Conveners: Edgar A Bering III, University of Houston, Sanlyn Buxner, Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, AZ, and Constance E Walker, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Edwardsville, IL, United States - P002: Aquaplanetology: Aqueous environments and habitability in the Solar System
Conveners:Yasuhito Sekine, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Gabriel Tobie, LPGN Laboratoire de Planétologie et Géodynamique de Nantes, Nantes, France, Bethany L Ehlmann, California Institute of Technology, Geological and Planetary Sciences, and Morgan L Cable, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology - P010: Detecting life through space and time: from geochemistry to biology
Conveners:Luoth Chou, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Solar System Exploration Division, Natalie Grefenstette, Santa Fe Institute, Heather Graham, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Solar System Exploration Division, and Sarah Johnson, Georgetown University - P017: Getting the Most out of Data in Astrobiology: Overcoming the Too Little, Too Rare, and Too Different
Conveners:Diana Gentry, NASA Ames Research Center, Haley M Sapers, University of Western Ontario, Centre for Planetary Science and Exploration, and Amanda M. Stockton, Jet Propulsion Laboratory - P018: Ice and Ocean Worlds: Geology, oceanography, chemistry, habitability
Conveners:Catherine C Walker, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Steve Vance, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Alyssa Mills, University of Alabama, Department of Geological Sciences, and Mallory J Kinczyk, North Carolina State University, Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences - P042: The New Mars Underground (and Beyond) 3.0
Conveners:Rachel Lee Harris, Princeton University, Department of Geosciences, Jesse Dylan Tarnas, Brown University, Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Ana-Catalina Plesa, German Aerospace Center DLR, Berlin, Germany - OS023: Seafloor Cold Seeps Dynamics: Local to Global Impacts of Methane Emission and Gas Hydrates on the Marine Environment
Conveners:Davide Oppo, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Adam D Skarke, Mississippi State University, Miriam Römer, MARUM – University of Bremen, Department of Geosciences, and Samantha Benton Joye, University of Georgia, Department of Marine Sciences - OS025: The Science Behind the Framework for Scientific Ocean Drilling through 2050
Conveners:Clive Robert Neal, University of Notre Dame, Gabriele Uenzelmann-Neben, Alfred Wegener Inst Polar, Bremerhaven, Germany, Nobukazu Seama, Kobe University, Japan, and Dick Kroon, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Missing a session of interest? Let us know!
We are now accepting proposals for Fall Meeting 2020, including Innovative Sessions, a new format inspired by programming at 2019’s Centennial Central. Due to COVID-19, AGU has extended the deadline until Thursday, April 23, 2020.
Drs. Samantha Joye, Anna-Louise Reysenbach and Adam Soule will host a Town Hall at the 2020 Ocean Sciences Meeting. The Town Hall is scheduled for Monday, February 17 from 12:25 to 1:45 pm at the San Diego Convention Center, 9, UL. The Town Hall is aimed at researchers who are interested in contributing to development of a grassroots community vision that will promote a new phase of deep sea discovery through coordinated transdisciplinary research efforts made possible through development of a Research Coordination Network proposal. This effort will advance the field and create new directions in deep sea science, promote new collaborations, and foster coordination and training across disciplinary, organizational, geographic, and international boundaries all while broadening participation in deep ocean science.
Join us for a National Science Foundation (NSF) sponsored workshop focused on the integration of Ocean Observing Initiative (OOI) data into undergraduate teaching of oceanography themes and concepts. Participants will explore a collection of Data Labs created by oceanography professors who attended the 2019 OOI Data Lab summer workshops. Learn from your peers lessons learned on how to effectively teach with data. Participants will share new teaching resources and brainstorm new ideas for how to integrate OOI data into introductory oceanography and Earth and environmental science courses. Professors who teach introductory (100 and 200 level) oceanography courses are encouraged to attend. Participants will receive a $300 stipend (issued post-workshop) along with complimentary light breakfast and lunch. Attendance is limited to 35 people. We will accept online submissions until January 15, 2020 or capacity is reached, whichever is sooner.
Nominations are now open for 2020 AGU honors, including the Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize. The extended nomination period aims to increase selection and diversity among the nominees and to allow more time for nominators to develop multiple nomination packages. Deadline extended to: June 1, 2020,
Attending the 2019 AGU Fall Meeting in San Francisco, December 9-13, 2019? Be sure to check out these C-DEBI-related sessions of interest:
Monday, December 9, 2019
8:00 – 12:20
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- B11H: Centennial Session: Biogeosciences at the Threshold of the Next Centennial: State of the Art and What We Still Need to Learn About Our Living Planet III Posters
Conveners: Durelle Scott (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University), Aditi Sengupta (University of Arizona), Benjamin N Sulman ((Princeton University), Dork L Sahagian (Lehigh University) - B11L: Filling the Gaps in the Sulfur Cycle: Using Modern Biotic and Abiotic Analogues to Understand Ancient Systems I Posters
Conveners: Cody Sheik (University of Minnesota Duluth), Kathryn M Schreiner (University of Minnesota Duluth), Sergei Katsev (University of Minnesota Duluth) - B11K: Exploring the Biotic Fringe I Posters
Conveners: Everett Shock (Arizona State University), Marshall Wayne Bowles (Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium), Elizabeth Trembath-Reichert (Arizona State University), Mark Alexander Lever (ETH Zurich, Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Biogeochemistry & Pollutant Dynamics) - ED11B: Amazing Technologies and Capabilities That Contribute to STEAM II Posters
Conveners: Emily Law (Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Brian Hamilton Day (NASA Ames Research Center), Kristen J Erickson (NASA Headquarters), John S Taber (IRIS)
11:20 – 12:20
Moscone South – Hall D, Centennial Central
- U12D: Ingredients for Life
Conveners: Kanani K M Lee (Department of Geology & Geophy), Dominique Weis (University of British Columbia), Catherine Johnson (University of British Columbia), France Lagroix (Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris)
13:40 – 15:40
Moscone West – 3003, L3
- B14B: Centennial Session: Biogeosciences at the Threshold of the Next Centennial: State of the Art and What We Still Need to Learn About Our Living Planet II
Conveners: Durelle Scott (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University), Aditi Sengupta (University of Arizona), Benjamin N Sulman ((Princeton University), Dork L Sahagian (Lehigh University)
16:00 – 18:00
Moscone West – 3003, L3
- B13C: Centennial Session: Biogeosciences at the Threshold of the Next Centennial: State of the Art and What We Still Need to Learn About Our Living Planet I
Conveners: Durelle Scott (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University), Aditi Sengupta (University of Arizona), Benjamin N Sulman ((Princeton University), Dork L Sahagian (Lehigh University)
18:15 – 19:15
Moscone West – 2020, L2
- TH15D: EarthCube: A Community-Driven Cyberinfrastructure for the Geosciences–A Progress Report
Primary Contact: Lynne Schreiber (University of California San Diego)
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
8:00 – 12:20
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- P21E: Getting the Most Out of Astrobiological Data: Overcoming the Too Little, Too Rare, and Too Different Posters
Conveners: Diana Gentry (NASA Ames Research Center), Haley M Sapers (University of Western Ontario)
10:20 – 12:20
Moscone West – 3012, L3
- B22B: Global Biogeochemical Cycles as Drivers for Climate and Life Evolution Through Earth’s History I
Conveners: Flavia Boscolo-Galazzo (Cardiff University), Ernest Chi-Fru (Cardiff University), Gordon Neil Inglis (University of Bristol), Jamie Devereux Wilson (University of Bristol)
13:40 – 15:40
Moscone South – eLightning Theater II
- ED23E: Efforts to Improve and Support REU Internship Programs eLightning
Conveners: Valerie Sloan (National Center for Atmospheric Research), Gabriela Noriega (Southern California Earthquake Center, University of Southern California), Diane Y Kim (University of Southern California), Kenneth Voglesonger (Northeastern Illinois University) - V23A: Magmatic and Hydrothermal Activity of the Yellowstone Plateau, or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Volcano I
Conveners: Karen M Luttrell (Louisiana State University), Michael P Poland (USGS), Madison Myers (Montana State University), Erin White (National Park Service)
13:40 – 18:00
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- B23J: Ecology of the Cryosphere: Biological and Environmental Interactions in Seasonally and Permanently Cold Ecosystems II Posters
Conveners: Megan Dillon (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Alexandra Contosta (University of New Hampshire Main Campus), Patrick Sorensen (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Neslihan Tas (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) - ED13C: Advancing Access to Undergraduate Research Through Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experiences (CUREs): Models, Access, and Adoptability I Posters
Conveners: Mark Lord (Western Carolina University), Kristina J Walowski (Middlebury College), Jeffrey G Ryan (University of South Florida) - OS23C: Cold Seeps of the Eastern Pacific: New Technologies Yield New Perspectives on the Biogeochemical Processes of a Well-Studied Subduction Margin I Posters
Conveners: Richard Camilli ((Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), Lori L Summa (Rice University, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), Erik E Cordes (Temple University), Benjamin Ayton (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
18:15 – 19:15
Moscone West – 2005, L2
- TH25C: Supporting Top Researchers from Anywhere in the World: Funding Opportunities from the European Research Council
Primary Contact: David Krasa (European Research Council)
16:00 – 18:00
Moscone South – 303-304, L3
- U24B: The Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize Ingredients for Life
Conveners: Karen G Lloyd (University of Tennessee), Judith A. McKenzie (ETH-Zurich), Awardee: Beth Orcutt
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
8:00 – 10:00
Moscone South – 151, Upper Mezz.
- V31B: Hydrothermal Systems in 4-D I
Conveners: Tobias Walter Höfig (Texas A&M University), Frieder Klein (Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst.), Susan E Humphris (WHOI), Emily H.G. Cooperdock (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
10:20 – 12:20
Moscone South – 151, Upper Mezz.
- V32B: Hydrothermal Systems in 4-D II
Conveners: Tobias Walter Höfig (Texas A&M University), Frieder Klein (Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst.), Susan E Humphris (WHOI), Emily H.G. Cooperdock (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
13:40 – 18:00
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- V33E: Hydrothermal Systems in 4-D III Posters
Conveners: Tobias Walter Höfig (Texas A&M University), Frieder Klein (Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst.), Susan E Humphris (WHOI), Emily H.G. Cooperdock (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
Thursday, December 12, 2019
8:00 – 10:00
Moscone South – 151, Upper Mezz.
- DI41B: Quantities, Movements, Forms, and Origins of Carbon and Other Volatile Elements in Earth and Planetary Bodies I
Conveners: Craig M Schiffries (Carnegie Institution for Science), Marie Edmonds (University of Cambridge), Michael Forster (Macquarie University), Chenguang Sun (Brown University)
8:00 – 12:20
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- B41H: Global Biogeochemical Cycles as Drivers for Climate and Life Evolution Through Earth’s History II Posters
Conveners: Flavia Boscolo-Galazzo (Cardiff University), Ernest Chi-Fru (Cardiff University), Gordon Neil Inglis (University of Bristol), Jamie Devereux Wilson (University of Bristol) - P41C: The New Mars Underground 2.0: Toward a 3-D Understanding of the Martian Crustal Subsurface III Posters
Conveners: Vlada Stamenkovic (Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Nina Lanza (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Kris Zacny (Honeybee Robotics), John F Mustard (Brown University)
12:30 – 13:30
Moscone West – 3005, L3
- TH43D: Centennial Early-Career Scientist Forum
Primary Contact: Caitlyn A Hall (Arizona State University)
13:40 – 15:40
Moscone West – 2002, L2
- OS43A: Fluid Migration and Gas Hydrate Systems in Continental Margins I
Conveners: Christian Berndt (GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel), Sverre Planke (Volcanic Basin Petroleum Rsch)
Moscone South – 213-214, L2
- P43B: The New Mars Underground 2.0: Toward a 3-D Understanding of the Martian Crustal Subsurface I
Conveners: Vlada Stamenkovic (Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Nina Lanza (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Kris Zacny (Honeybee Robotics), John F Mustard (Brown University)
13:40 – 18:00
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- PA43C: Ocean Exploration: Communication and Outreach About Uncovering Earth’s Secrets from the Seafloor and Beyond Posters
Conveners: Sharon K Cooper (Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory), Carol Cotterill (British Geological Survey), Karen Romano Young (Self Employed), Douglas Harned (FilmAxis.org)
16:00 – 18:00
Moscone West – 3005, L3
- B44C: Microbial Metabolisms and Biogeochemical Processes in Earth’s Subsurface I
Conveners: James Andrew Bradley (University of Southern California), Cara Magnabosco (Simons Foundation), Nagissa Mahmoudi (McGill University)
Moscone South – 213-214, L2
- P44B: The New Mars Underground 2.0: Toward a 3-D Understanding of the Martian Crustal Subsurface II
Conveners: Vlada Stamenkovic (Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Nina Lanza (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Kris Zacny (Honeybee Robotics), John F Mustard (Brown University)
Friday, December 13, 2019
8:00 – 12:20
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- EP51D: Earth 4-D: A Deep Dive into the Habitability of the Blue Planet II Posters
Conveners: John F Mustard (Brown University), Magdalena R Osburn (Northwestern University), Haley M Sapers (University of Western Ontario) - OS51B: Advances in Understanding Seafloor Volcanism and Life: Axial Seamount: A Wired Submarine Volcano Observatory I Posters
Conveners: Deborah S Kelley (University of Washington Seattle Campus), William W. Chadwick (NOAA PMEL Earth Ocean Interactions Program) - V51G: Izu-Bonin-Mariana Arc System: Synthesis and Remaining Questions II Posters
Conveners: Susan DeBari (Western Washington University), Charles Geoffrey Wheat (NURP/ Univ Alaska), Shuichi Kodaira (Yokohama National University), Julie Prytulak (Imperial College London)
13:40 – 18:00
Moscone South – Poster Hall
- B53L: Microbial Metabolisms and Biogeochemical Processes in Earth’s Subsurface II Posters
Conveners: James Andrew Bradley (University of Southern California), Cara Magnabosco (Simons Foundation), Nagissa Mahmoudi (McGill University) - B53G: Exploring Microbial Ecosystems Using Cutting-Edge Advances in Isotope and Omics Analyses II Posters
Conveners: James Moran (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Paul Dijkstra (Northern Arizona Univ), Steven Blazewicz (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) - B53O: Mapping Biodiversity Through Space and Time: Integrating Sedimentary DNA, Metagenomics, Phylogenetics, and Ecological Approaches to Resolve Biodiversity Gaps II Posters
Conveners: Sarah E Crump (University of Colorado at Boulder), Emily Jane McTavish (University of California Merced), Trisha Spanbauer (University of Toledo, University of Texas at Austin), Kyle Copas (GBIF Secretariat)
16:00 – 18:00
Moscone West – 3009, L3
- EP54B: Earth 4D: A Deep Dive into the Habitability of the Blue Planet I
Conveners: John F Mustard (Brown University), Magdalena R Osburn (Northwestern University), Haley M Sapers (University of Western Ontario)
Moscone South – 153, Upper Mezz.
- V54B: Izu-Bonin-Mariana Arc System: Synthesis and Remaining Questions I
Conveners: Susan DeBari (Western Washington University), Charles Geoffrey Wheat (NURP/ Univ Alaska), Shuichi Kodaira (Yokohama National University), Julie Prytulak (Imperial College London)
See also the Deep Carbon Observatory’s AGU Fall Meeting Guide and consider attending IODP’s AGU Town Hall, ICDP’s Town Hall, and OOIFB’s Town Hall. and Missing a session of interest? Let us know.
A hearty congratulations to C-DEBI Senior Scientist Beth Orcutt who will be will be awarded the prestigious Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Prize this December!
Attending the AGU Fall Meeting, December 9-13, 2019? Consider submitting your abstracts (due July 31, 2019) to these deep biosphere-related Session Proposals:
B036 Creating Data Synchronicity Across Earth Microbiome Research
Elisha M Wood-Charlson1, Bonnie L Hurwitz2, Emiley Eloe-Fadrosh3 and Kjiersten Fagnan3, (1)Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States(2)University of Arizona, Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Tucson, AZ, United States(3)Joint Genome Institute, Walnut Creek, CA, United States
B046 Exploring microbial ecosystems using cutting edge advances in isotope and omics analyses
James Moran, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA, United States, Paul Dijkstra, Northern Arizona Univ, Flagstaff, AZ, United States and Steven Blazewicz, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, United States
B047 Exploring the Biotic Fringe
Everett Shock1, Marshall Wayne Bowles2,3, Elizabeth Trembath-Reichert1 and Mark Alexander Lever4, (1)Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United States(2)MARUM – University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany(3)Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, Chauvin, LA, United States(4)ETH Zurich, Department of Environmental Systems Science, Institute of Biogeochemistry & Pollutant Dynamics, Zürich, Switzerland
B059 How Microbial Functional Traits Regulate Terrestrial Carbon And Nutrient Cycling From Local To Global Scales
Yang Song1, Melanie A Mayes1 and Malak M Tfaily2, (1)Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Climate Change Science Institute & Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge, TN, United States(2)University of Arizona, Soil, Water and Environmental Science, Tucson, AZ, United States
B074 Microbial contributions to methane cycling
Christopher Abin, University of Oklahoma Norman Campus, Microbiology and Plant BIology, Norman, OK, United States, Ellen Grace Lauchnor, Montana State University, Civil Engineering, Bozeman, MT, United States and Erika Espinosa-Ortiz, Montana State University, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Bozeman, MT, United States
B076 Microbial Metabolisms and Biogeochemical Processes in Earth’s Subsurface
James Bradley, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States, Cara Magnabosco, Simons Foundation, Flatiron Institute Center for Computational Biology, New York, NY, United States and Nagissa Mahmoudi, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
B085 Omics-Informed Models of Microbial Dynamics and Processes from Cells to Ecosystems
Timothy D Scheibe, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA, United States, Romy Chakraborty, Lawrence Berkeley Nat’l Lab, Berkeley, CA, United States, Pamela Weisenhorn, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, United States and John D Moulton, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, United States
ED021 Curating the creative: Science, art, and public engagement
Katie Pratt, University of Rhode Island, Graduate School of Oceanography, Narragansett, RI, United States, Darlene Trew Crist, Deep Carbon Observatory, Narragansett, RI, United States and Emma Liu, University of Cambridge, Earth Sciences, Cambridge, United Kingdom
ED024 Efforts to improve and support REU Internship Programs
Valerie Sloan, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Education & Outreach, Boulder, CO, United States, Gabriela Noriega, Southern California Earthquake Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States, Diane Y Kim, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States and Kenneth Voglesonger, Northeastern Illinois University, Earth Science and Environmental Science Program, Chicago, IL, United States
EP018 – Earth 4D – a Deep Dive into the Habitability of the Blue Planet
John F Mustard, Brown University, Barbara Sherwood Lollar, University of Toronto, Magdalena R Osburn, Northwestern University
H034 Characterizing Spatial and Temporal Variability of Hydrological and Biogeochemical Processes across Scales
Bhavna Arora, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, United States and Haruko Murakami Wainwright, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley, CA, United States
OS001 Advancements in Understanding Seafloor Volcanism and Life: Axial Seamount – A Wired Submarine Volcano Observatory
Deborah S Kelley, University of Washington Seattle Campus, School of Oceanography, Seattle, WA, United States and William W. Chadwick Jr, Oregon State University, CIMRS, and NOAA/PMEL, Newport, WA, United States
OS004 Beyond Hydrography: Seafloor Mapping as Critical Data for Understanding Our Oceans
Nicole Raineault, Ocean Exploration Trust, Narragansett, RI, United States, Vicki Lynn Ferrini, LDEO, Palisades, NY, United States, Rachel Medley, NOAA Office of Exploration and Research, Silver Spring, United States and Maria T Judge, Geological Survey of Ireland, Marine Geology, Dublin, Ireland
OS014 General topics in biological or chemical oceanography in poster format
John Crusius, USGS Alaska Science Center at UW School of Oceanography, Seattle, WA, United States and Zackary I Johnson, Duke University, Beaufort, NC, United States
P038 – The New Mars Underground 2.0: Towards a 3D Understanding of the Martian Crustal Subsurface
Vlada Stamenkovic, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Nina Lanza, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Kris Zacny, Honeybee Robotics, John F Mustard, Brown University
V027 Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc system: synthesis and remaining questions
Susan DeBari, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA, United States, Julie Prytulak, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom, Charles Geoffrey Wheat, NURP/ Univ Alaska, Moss Landing, CA, United States and Shuichi Kodaira, Yokohama National University, Yokohama, Japan
Missing a session of interest? Let us know!
As AGU marks its Centennial in 2019, we return to San Francisco, the home of the Fall Meeting for more than 40 years. Join our diverse community at the newly renovated Moscone Center as we collaborate across borders and boundaries to explore and develop our research. Don’t miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to participate in Centennial presentations and special events that will bring to life the past, present and the future of our science. Today we experience “Science at the Speed of Life.” Fall Meeting will prepare you for what’s ahead: rapid developments in our science, new approaches to observing our Earth and beyond, the introduction of new data streams, growing demand for accessible science, the expansion of convergent science, and more. There is no better place than Fall Meeting to look into the future and develop your skills and your understanding of other disciplines at the same time. At Fall Meeting, we will draw inspiration from each other and will show how earth and space science enables a more resilient and sustainable future for all. Proposal deadline: April 17, 2019.
The Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize (The Taira Prize) is given annually to one honoree in recognition of “outstanding transdisciplinary research accomplishment in ocean drilling.” Established in 2014, the Taira Prize is a partnership between the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and the Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU), and is made possible through the generous donation from the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International (IODP-MI). The prize is given in honor of Dr. Asahiko Taira of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. Deadline to nominate: April 15, 2019.
Attending the 2018 AGU Fall Meeting in Washington D.C., December 10-14, 2018? Be sure to check out these C-DEBI-related sessions of interest:
Monday, December 10, 2018
8:00am – 10:00am
Marriott Marquis – Marquis 6
- V11B: Crustal Formation, Fluid–Rock Reactions, and Subsurface Microbial Communities in the Samail Ophiolite: Results from the Oman Drilling Project and Related Research II
Conveners: Damon A H Teagle (U Southampton), Juerg Michael Matter (U Southampton), Peter B Kelemen (Columbia U), Alexis S Templeton (UC Boulder)
Marriott Marquis – Marquis 7-8
- ED11A: Aiming for Truly Diverse Diversity to Strengthen the Geoscience Community I
Conveners: Sharon K Cooper (LDEO), Wesley Henson (USGS), Benjamin Andrew Keisling (UMass Amherst)
8:00am – 12:20pm
Convention Center Hall A-C (Poster Hall)
- V11E: Earth’s Organic Carbon Cycle: From Oceans to Mantle Posters
Conveners: Matthieu Emmanuel Galvez (ETH Zurich), Temilola Fatoyinbo (NASA GSFC), Cara Magnabosco (Simons), Timoth I Eglinton (ETH Zurich)
10:20am – 12:20pm
Marriott Marquis – Marquis 6
- V12B: Crustal Formation, Fluid–Rock Reactions, and Subsurface Microbial Communities in the Samail Ophiolite: Results from the Oman Drilling Project and Related Research
Conveners: Damon A H Teagle (U Southampton), Juerg Michael Matter (U Southampton), Peter B Kelemen (Columbia U), Alexis S Templeton (UC Boulder)
Marriott Marquis – Marquis 7-8
- ED12A: Aiming for Truly Diverse Diversity to Strengthen the Geoscience Community II
Conveners: Sharon K Cooper (LDEO), Wesley Henson (USGS), Benjamin Andrew Keisling (UMass Amherst)
Convention Center 202A
- U12A: Fifty Years of Scientific Ocean Drilling: How the Past Informs the Future
Conveners: James D Wright (Rutgers), Leanne Armand (Macquarie U), Anthony Morris (Plymouth U), Yoshiyuki Tatsumi (Kobe U)
1:40pm – 6:00pm
Convention Center Hall A-C (Poster Hall)
- ED13C: Aiming for Truly Diverse Diversity to Strengthen the Geoscience Community III Posters
Conveners: Sharon K Cooper (LDEO), Wesley Henson (USGS), Benjamin Andrew Keisling (UMass Amherst) - V13E: Crustal Formation, Fluid-Rock Reactions and Subsurface Microbial Communities in the Samail ophiolite: Results from the Oman Drilling Project and Related Research I Posters
Conveners: Damon A H Teagle (U Southampton), Juerg Michael Matter (U Southampton), Peter B Kelemen (Columbia U), Alexis S Templeton (UC Boulder)
4:00pm – 6:00pm
Marriott Marquis – Liberty I-K
- V14A: Oceanic Intraplate Volcanism II
Conveners: Lisa K. Samrock (GEOMAR), Thor H Hansteen (GEOMAR), Ricardo Ramalho (U de Lisboa), Dennis Geist (NSF)
6:15pm – 7:15pm
Marriott Marquis – Independence Salon E (M4 Level)
- Ocean Observatories Initiative Facility Board (OOIFB) Town Hall
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
1:40pm – 6:00pm
Convention Center Hall A-C (Poster Hall)
- B23E: Integrated Habitability Science: Forecasting the Trajectory of Life and Planetary Habitability on Earth and Beyond Posters
Conveners: Fumio Inagaki (JAMSTEC), Vlada Stamenkovic (JPL), Victoria J Orphan (CalTech), Kai-Uwe Hinrichs (MARUM) - B23F: Picky Eating in the Deep Subsurface? Posters
Conveners: Emily R Estes (U Delaware), Elizabeth Trembath-Reichert (WHOI), Sabrina Beckmann (U Delaware)
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
1:40pm – 3:40pm
Convention Center 207A
- P33A: Enceladus: A World Awaiting I
Conveners: Carolyn Porco (Space Sci. Inst. Boulder), Julie Huber (WHOI)
Marriott Marquis – Liberty L
- V33A: Hydrothermal Systems in Oceanic Arcs: Subseafloor Structure, Mineralization Processes, and Vent Communities I
Conveners: Hidenori Kumagai (JAMSTEC), Susan E Humphris (WHOI), Cornel E J de Ronde (GNS Science), Jun-Ichiro Ishibashi (Kyushu U)
Marriott Marquis – Liberty L
- U33B: The Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize
Presentation: “Understanding Shallow Subsurface Fluid Flow in Marine Sediments through Coring, Logging, Experiments, and Models”, Brandon Dugan (Colorado School of Mines)
1:40pm – 6:00pm
Convention Center Hall A-C (Poster Hall)
- P33G: Analogue Studies of Gradient Systems Relevant to Astrobiology on Ocean Worlds and Mars I Posters
Conveners: Laura M Barge (JPL), Scott M Perl (JPL)
4:00pm – 6:00pm
Marriott Marquis – Liberty L
- V34A: Hydrothermal Systems in Oceanic Arcs: Subseafloor Structure, Mineralization Processes, and Vent Communities II
Conveners: Hidenori Kumagai (JAMSTEC), Susan E Humphris (WHOI), Cornel E J de Ronde (GNS Science), Jun-Ichiro Ishibashi (Kyushu U)
7:00pm
Washington Plaza Hotel, Grand Ballroom, 10 Thomas Circle, NW
- IODP Town Hall
Thursday, December 13, 2018
8:00am – 10:00am
Convention Center 143A-C
- B41B: Centennial: Biogeosciences—Defining the Pulse of a Living Planet
Conveners: Dork L Sahagian (Lehigh U), Ariel D Anbar (ASU), Patrick M Crill (Stockholm U), Durelle Scott (VA Tech)
10:20am – 12:20pm
Convention Center 143A-C
- B42B: Centennial: Transformational Contributions over the Past 100 Years in the Biogeosciences I
Conveners: Dork L Sahagian (Lehigh U), Ariel D Anbar (ASU), Patrick M Crill (Stockholm U), Durelle Scott (VA Tech)
Convention Center 207A
- P42B: From the Earth to the Moons: Unraveling the Geologic, Oceanographic, and Chemical Mysteries of Ice and Ocean Worlds III
Conveners: Catherine C Walker (WHOI), Steven Vance (JPL), Christopher R German (WHOI), Britney E Schmidt (GI Tech)
1:40pm – 3:40pm
Convention Center 206
- P23B: “The New Mars Underground”: Science and Exploration of a New Deep Frontier II
Conveners: Vlada Stamenkovic (JPL), Penelope Jane Boston (NASA Ames), Robert E Grimm (SW Research Inst. Boulder), Kris Zacny (Honeybee)
1:40pm – 6:00pm
Convention Center Hall A-C (Poster Hall)
- B43H: Microbiome and Microbial Biogeochemistry in Terrestrial Saline/Hypersaline Environments Posters
Conveners: Hongchen Jiang (China U Geosciences Wuhan), Gary King (LSU) - P43F: Enceladus: A World Awaiting II Posters
Conveners: Carolyn Porco (Space Sci. Inst. Boulder), Julie Huber (WHOI) - V43F: Hydrothermal Systems in Oceanic Arcs: Subseafloor Structure, Mineralization Processes, and Vent Communities III Posters
Conveners: Hidenori Kumagai (JAMSTEC), Susan E Humphris (WHOI), Cornel E J de Ronde (GNS Science), Jun-Ichiro Ishibashi (Kyushu U) - V43G: New Insights into Oceanic Spreading Centers from Seafloor Observatories Posters
Conveners: Christian Baillard (U Washington), Thibaut Barreyre (U Bergen), Marjolaine Matabos (IFREMER), David A Butterfield (U Washington)
Friday, December 14, 2018
10:20am – 12:20pm
Marriott Marquis – Capitol/Congress
- V52B: New Insights into Oceanic Spreading Centers from Seafloor Observatories I
Conveners: Christian Baillard (U Washington), Thibaut Barreyre (U Bergen), Marjolaine Matabos (IFREMER), David A Butterfield (U Washington)
See also the Deep Carbon Observatory’s AGU Fall Meeting Guide. Missing a session of interest? Let us know.
This year, the Fall Meeting Program Committee invites you to submit session proposals that elevate our understanding of the ways that our science is evolving. Scientific advances that contribute to the health and welfare of people worldwide, that spur innovation within and beyond our fields of study, and that inform decisions critical to the sustainability of the Earth are of particular interest. In brief, sessions that support this year’s theme: What Science Stands For. The deadline for submissions is April 18, 2018.
The Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize (The Taira Prize) is given annually to one honoree in recognition of “outstanding transdisciplinary research accomplishment in ocean drilling.” Established in 2014, the Taira Prize is a partnership between the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and the Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU), and is made possible through the generous donation from the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International (IODP-MI). The prize is given in honor of Dr. Asahiko Taira of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. The nominee must be an active early career/early mid-career scientist who is within 15 years of receiving their Ph.D. of any discipline, and must be making an impact in the field of ocean drilling. Deadline to nominate: March 15, 2018.
Planning on attending the 2018 Ocean Sciences Meeting in Portland, OR? Consider submitting your abstracts to these deep biosphere-related sessions. Abstracts due: September 6, 2017.
- BN006. Biogeochemical Processes Across Oxic-Anoxic Transitions
Roberta Claire Hamme (U Victoria), Jeffry V Sorensen (U Victoria) and Tim M Conway (U South Carolina) - BN013. Investigating marine microbial interactions with stable isotopes
Alexis Pasulka (Cal Poly) and Katherine Dawson (Rutgers) - BN015. Linking modern “omics” techniques and ecosystem models
Naomi Marcil Levine (USC), Eric A Webb (USC), Victoria Coles (UMCES) and Raleigh R Hood (U Maryland) - BN016. Methane from the Subsurface through the Bio-, Hydro- and Atmosphere: Advances in Natural Hydrate Systems and Methane Seeps in Marine Ecosystems
Tamara Baumberger (NOAA/PMEL), Andrew R Thurber (Oregon State U), Jeffrey J Marlow (Harvard) and Marta E Torres (Oregon State U) - BN019. Organic matter – microbe interactions: underlying links and constraints
Jutta Niggemann (U Oldenburg), Helena Osterholz (U Oldenburg), Silvia Vidal (MARUM) and Andrew D Steen (UTK) - ED005. Innovations in Interdisciplinary Ocean Leadership & Workforce Development for Early Career Scientists
Todd Christenson (NOAA), Laura H Good (Stanford), Stephanie Schroeder (USC/C-DEBI) and Andrea K Johnson (NSF) - ED011. Researcher and Educator Partnerships: What has worked and what has not, Lessons from the Field and classrooms.
George I Matsumoto (MBARI), Janice D McDonnell (Rutgers), Liesl A Hotaling (Eidos Education/Marine Technology Society) and Caroline Susan Weiler (Whitman) - ED013. “Ship-to-Shore”: Ocean Sciences in a Changing World
Stephanie M Sharuga (NAS), Carlie Wiener (SOI), Nicole Raineault (Ocean Exploration Trust) and Elizabeth Lobecker (NOAA) - EP006. Ecological Fluid Mechanics – Interactions among Organisms and their Fluid Environment
Donald R Webster (GA Tech) and Brad J Gemmell (U South Florida) - IS002. Advancing Ocean Biogeochemistry with In Situ Technologies and Observation Networks
Anna Michel (WHOI), Amy V Mueller (MIT), Brian T Glazer (U Hawaii at Manoa) and Aleck Zhaohui Wang (WHOI) - MM004. Discoveries in viral ecology and microbial adaptation to extreme environments
Jody W Deming (U Washington Seattle), Matt Sullivan (Ohio State U), Jodi N Young (U Washington Seattle), Hajo Eicken (UAF) - MM010. Tools and cyber-infrastructure for microbial omics studies
Ramunas Stepanauskas (Bigelow), Paul Berube (MIT) and Steven Biller (MIT) - MM012. Functional, ecological, and evolutionary implications of microdiversity and intra-specific variability in aquatic microorganisms
Michael S Rappe (U Hawaii Manoa), Sherwood Lan Smith (JAMSTEC), Bingzhang Chen (JAMSTEC) and David M Needham (MBARI) - PC006. Nano- and Micro-scale Chemical Signatures in the Ocean: Small Signals from Climate and Microbes with a Big Impact
Alexander C Gagnon (U Washington Seattle), Howard J Spero (UC Davis) and Anne E Dekas (Stanford)
Proposals are invited from all fields of scientific interest to be represented at the most influential gathering of Earth and space scientists in the world. This year sessions on the topics of data and geohealth are of particular interest to the Fall Meeting Program Committee. Data & Emerging Technologies: Data is critical to scientific advancement and improving our understanding of how natural systems and phenomena operate and change. Data should be openly accessible and archived for reuse into the future. Emerging technologies are creating new instruments, sensor arrays, and platforms that enable the collection of new data types and/or improve the resolution, accuracy, and precision of data collection methodologies. Frontier computational techniques and visualization tools are rapidly influencing the way we collect data and conduct science, thus forming a fertile breeding ground for new ideas and never-before-attempted science. Geohealth: Thisrapidly growing science covers the interface between the Earth, health, ecosystem, and agricultural sciences. The topic connects and brings together talks on climate change and human health, medical geology, natural hazards and health, atmospheric science, air pollution, the health effects of fire, the interface between water quality and health, and much more. Submission deadline: April 19, 2017.
The Asahiko Taira International Scientific Ocean Drilling Research Prize (The Taira Prize) is given annually to one honoree in recognition of “outstanding transdisciplinary research accomplishment in ocean drilling.” Established in 2014, the Taira Prize is a partnership between the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and the Japan Geoscience Union (JpGU), and is made possible through the generous donation from the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International (IODP-MI). The prize is given in honor of Dr. Asahiko Taira of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. Nominations due March 15, 2017.
For those of you faculty who are attending AGU this year please consider registering to judge student presentations for the Outstanding Student Presentation Award. Your generous time commitment and constructive feedback makes a very big impact on the confidence of our students and is vital for their growth and development as scientists as they hoʻoulu (transform/grow) into our future colleagues. Plus, judging is FUN! Signing up for judging is a cinch! 1.) Go to http://ospa.agu.org/ospa/judges and log in with your AGU account, read the honor code, and click “register to judge.” 2.) Then, check out the list of student OSPA presentations by session: http://ospa.agu.org/ospa/find-presentations/. 3.) When you see OSPA presentations that fit your schedule and interests, you can add the presentation to your OSPA list by clicking the checkbox to the right of the presentation title, and then clicking “Add to Schedule.” Brandi Reese, Sebastian Sudek, Julie Robidart and myself (Kiana Frank) are convening a C-DEBI related session (B13G: Understanding Microbial Life in the Subsurface through Interdisciplinary Approaches I, B22D: Understanding Microbial Life in the Subsurface through Interdisciplinary Approaches II) and we would love for you to consider judging student presentations in these sessions if they fit your interest, expertise and schedule. If not… see below for a list of other deep biosphere related sessions that are also likely in need of judges. Please contact me with any questions.
- B11F: Microbial Geochemistry and Geomicrobiology: From DNA to Rock I Posters
- B13D: Integrating Biogeochemical and Microbiological Approaches to Understand Ecosystem Processes and Responses to Environmental Change IV Posters
- B13G: Understanding Microbial Life in the Subsurface through Interdisciplinary Approaches I
- B13J: Integrating Biogeochemical and Microbiological Approaches to Understand Ecosystem Processes and Responses to Environmental Change III
- B21E: Fifteen Years of Geobiology: The Significant Highlights and the Future I Posters
- B22D: Understanding Microbial Life in the Subsurface through Interdisciplinary Approaches II
- B23H: Investigating Biological Processes: Insights from New Stable Isotope Methods II
- B24B: Fifteen Years of Geobiology: The Significant Highlights and the Future II
- B31A: 4 Billion Years of Serpentinization on Earth and Beyond I Posters
- B33A: Alternative Earths: The Co-evolution of Life and its Environments from the GOE to the Rise of Complex Life I Posters
- B33I: 4 Billion Years of Serpentinization on Earth and Beyond II
- B43D: (Bio-isotopic) Message in a (Rock Record) Bottle Revisited: Who Wrote It, How Did It Get Here, and What Does It Tell Us? II
- B44B: Biogeochemical Cycling in the Cryosphere III
- B51K: Geomicrobiology of Extreme Environments: Scarcity is the Mother of Invention I
- B53C: Geomicrobiology of Extreme Environments: Scarcity is the Mother of Invention II Posters
- C33C: Solid Earth-Cryosphere Interactions II Posters
- ED24A: Amazing Technologies and Capabilities that Contribute to STEM III
- ED21E: Educator/Student Programs Promoting Authentic Scientific Research I
- ED31E: New Approaches to Professional and Career Development for Students and Postdocs in the Geosciences I Posters
- ED51F: NSF-Supported Undergraduate Learning Opportunities about the Earth, Oceans, and Atmospheric Sciences Posters
- IN44A: BIG Value of Small Data: Realizing the Huge Potential of the Diverse “Long Tail” Communities to Contribute to the Advancement of Science II
- OS23F: New Advances in Understanding Mid-Ocean Ridge Processes from Ocean Drilling and Ophiolites I
- OS24B: New Advances in Understanding Mid-Ocean Ridge Processes from Ocean Drilling and Ophiolites II
- OS31D: New Advances in Understanding Mid-Ocean Ridge Processes from Ocean Drilling and Ophiolites III Posters
- OS34A: Recent Scientific Discoveries and Innovative Technology and Method Developments that Advance Characterization of the Deep Ocean I
- OS41C: Scientific and Technical Advances in Mapping and Characterizing Seafloor Volcanism and Hydrothermal Processes I Posters
- OS43D: Scientific and Technical Advances in Mapping and Characterizing Seafloor Volcanism and Hydrothermal Processes II
- OS44B: Scientific and Technical Advances in Mapping and Characterizing Seafloor Volcanism and Hydrothermal Processes III
- OS54B: South China Sea: A Natural Laboratory for Investigating Marginal Sea Tectonic, Oceanographic/Paleoceanographic, and Biogeochemical Processes III
- P21C: The Early Mars Environment: Warm and Wet, Cold and Wet, or Cold and Icy? I Posters
- PP11A: Authigenic Processes in Marine Sediment: Influence on Seawater Composition and the Paleoceanographic Record I Posters
- T13B: Characterization of Oceanic Crust: Ridge to Trench Evolution I Posters
- V34A: Advances in Approaches and Instruments for Isotope Studies II
Missing a session of interest? Let us know!