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Goldschmidt2018

Perspectives Letters

Perspectives

Partners

January 2018

Goldschmidt 2018

Abstract submission and early registration open online

Abstract submission and early registration open online

Abstract submission for the Goldschmidt 2018 Conference, scheduled for Boston from August 12-17, is now open. Learn how to prepare and submit your abstract here; the deadline is 30 March. The full list of sessions to which you may submit an abstract is here. Early online registration is also open; registration fees will increase by $100 after 12 June.

Society News

Elements December issue: Layered Intrusions

Elements December issue: Layered Intrusions

For more than 50 years, layered mafic-ultramafic intrusions have served as natural laboratories for studying magma chamber processes and magmatic differentiation. Further enhancing our understanding of layered intrusion formation will yield valuable insights into the solidification of magmatic systems, the formation of precious metal deposits, and the timescales over which substantial crust-forming episodes occur. Read more

EAG members receive print copies of Elements Magazine and have online access to all back issues (user id = email address, password = EAG membership number). To find your membership number, login to your member area.

EAG Student Sponsorship: next deadline is 1 February

EAG Student Sponsorship: next deadline is 1 February

ECS

The EAG Student Sponsorship Program sponsors 12 students each year, up to 500 Euros per student, to attend geochemistry related short courses, summer schools, workshops or conferences located in Europe (except for the Goldschmidt conference). The next application deadline is 1 February. Find out more.

New issue of Geochemical Perspectives

'Glacier Biogeochemistry' by Martin Sharp and Martyn Tranter

'Glacier Biogeochemistry' by Martin Sharp and Martyn Tranter

This issue of Geochemical Perspectives charts a paradigm shift in glacier geochemistry and hydrochemistry. The beds of glaciers and ice sheets were thought to be abiotic only 20 years ago, but now it is known that a diverse range of microbes colonise these environments, and that microbial processes influence chemical weathering and nutrient cycling in aqueous subglacial environments. Read more

Geochemical Perspectives is an open access publication of the EAG. The print version is sent to EAG members.

New in Geochemical Perspectives Letters

Large oxygen excess in the primitive mantle could be the...

Large oxygen excess in the primitive mantle could be the...

D. Andrault, M. Muñoz, G. Pesce, V. Cerantola, A. Chumakov, I. Kantor, S. Pascarelli, R. Rüffer, L. Hennet

Before the Archean to Proterozoic Transition (APT) the tectonic regime was dominated by microplates floating on a low viscosity mantle. Such a regime restricted chemical exchange between the shallow and deeper mantle reservoirs. After the APT, a more global convection regime led to deep subduction of slabs. Read more

Reply to comment on “Repulsion between calcite crystals and...

Reply to comment on “Repulsion between calcite crystals and...

Y. Levenson, S. Emmanuel

The comment by Le Merrer and Colombani (2017) focuses on the mechanisms that could account for our experiments, in which we observed the detachment of micrometre scale calcite grains from the surface of micritic limestone during contact with a reactive fluid (Levenson and Emmanuel, 2017). They discuss some of the forces acting on the grains and imply that our observations are likely to be artefacts of the experimental method. Read more

Comment on “Repulsion between calcite crystals and grain...

Comment on “Repulsion between calcite crystals and grain...

M. Le Merrer, J. Colombani

Levenson and Emmanuel suggested recently that the mechanism of carbonate rock weathering in fluids is not limited to nanoscale processes but that chemico-mechanical processes also take place at the micrometre scale, such as grain detachment from the material surface. This phenomenon was first observed in flowing liquids (Levenson and Emmanuel, 2016). Read more

EAG Blogosphere

 Six questions to Adina Paytan

Six questions to Adina Paytan

[Interview by the EAG Communications Committee] Adina Paytan is a Research Professor at the Institute of Marine Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz. The major focus of her research is understanding past and present marine biogeochemical cycles. Read more

 EAG Ambassadors at the AGU2017 Fall Meeting

EAG Ambassadors at the AGU2017 Fall Meeting

[By the EAG ambassadors] Last December, six EAG Early Career Science Ambassadors travelled to New Orleans to attend the 2017 edition of the Annual Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union. In Part 1, they talk to us about what it was like attending and presenting at the world's largest geosciences meeting, as well as some of the careers workshops on offer! Read more

Geochemistry making the news

U.S. rivers are getting saltier, potentially compromising ...

U.S. rivers are getting saltier, potentially compromising ...

[Science] The bomb cyclone that hit the northeastern United States last week left roadways and vehicles caked in a white film of road salt and grime. Those salts might be washing into the region’s fresh waterways, a new study reveals. Read more

Fire reductions 'make methane numbers add up'

Fire reductions 'make methane numbers add up'

[BBC] Scientists think they can now better explain the recent surge in methane levels seen in the Earth's atmosphere. Although only a trace component in the air, CH4 is a greenhouse gas and has been rising rapidly since about 2006. Read more

Climate Models Underestimate the Cooling Effect That Clouds Have

Climate Models Underestimate the Cooling Effect That Clouds Have

[SciTechDaily] Princeton University researchers have found that the climate models scientists use to project future conditions on our planet underestimate the cooling effect that clouds have on a daily — and even hourly — basis, particularly over land. Read more

Chemists discover plausible recipe for early life on Earth

Chemists discover plausible recipe for early life on Earth

[ScienceDaily] Chemists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have developed a fascinating new theory for how life on Earth may have begun. Their experiments, described today in the journal Nature Communications, demonstrate that key chemical reactions that support life today could have been carried out with ingredients likely present on the planet four billion years ago. Read more

Job opportunities

Current job opportunities

Current job opportunities

ECS

Receive job ads as they are posted: like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter (@EAG_). To post a position on the EAG job page (free of charge): click here.

PhD & MSc positions:

bulletOne PhD position available at the University of Liege (Belgium) in the field of petrology-volcanology to investigate magmatic processes under one volcano of the andean arc (Chili) - University of Liege

bulletTwo PhD positions available in Environmental Biogeochemistry and Soil Science to study arsenic uptake and speciation at the soil/plant and plant/mammalian interface - University of Bern

bullet2 PhD Positions: Winter Soil Processes in Transition - A research project to advance the process-based understanding of the function of soil biogeochemical processes in cold region - University of Waterloo

bulletOpen positions: Biochemical, Genetic, Metabolic, and Isotopic Constraints on an Ancient Thiobiosphere - Multiple locations

bulletPhD position in eco-hydrology (Hydrological constraints on Rare Earth Elements dynamics in the regolith-plant continuum) - LIST Luxembourg

PostDoctoral and Fellowship positions:

bulletPostdoctoral position in fjord sedimentology and sediment geochemistry. - Ghent University

bullet2-year Postdoc Position - Building the crust of Mercury - University of Liege

bulletPostdoctoral Researcher position in MD simulations - McGill University

bulletPostdoctoral Researcher position in Experimental Petrology - McGill University

bulletResearch Associate in Fluid-Rock-Gas Geochemistry - University College London

bulletResearch Fellow / Akademische(r) Rat/Rätin auf Zeit (Salary Scale A13, 100%) - Leibniz Universität Hannover

bulletFull-time, 12-month Laboratory Manager / Research Associate in the School of Geosciences Stable Isotope Lab - University of South Florida

bulletPostdoctoral position in geochemistry/cosmochemistry - California Institute of Technology

bulletOpen positions: Biochemical, Genetic, Metabolic, and Isotopic Constraints on an Ancient Thiobiosphere - Multiple locations

bulletTwo Postdoctoral positions in Biogeochemical and Ecosystem Modeling - Global Water Futures Program, Ecohydrology Research Group, University of Waterloo

Faculty, Technical and other positions:

bulletTenured Full Professor Position in Astrobiology at the Institute for Planetary Materials. - Okayama University

bulletERG recrute au sein de son agence basée à La Seyne sur mer (83), un Technicien Géologue H/F(Position advertised in French) - ERG Géotechnique

bulletFull-time academic position in Geochemistry of extreme environments - Université Libre de Bruxelles

Conferences and short courses

Upcoming deadlines for geochemistry related events

Upcoming deadlines for geochemistry related events

bullet7th EuCheMS Chemistry Congress: abstract deadline: 29 Jan

bulletICHMET2018: 19th International Conference on Heavy Metals in the Environment : abstract deadline: 1 Feb

bulletICCBES 2018: International Congress on Chemical, Biological and Environmental Sciences: abstract deadline: 9 Feb

bulletIMA2018: XXII General Meeting of the International Mineralogical Association: abstract deadline: 28 Feb

bulletInternational Conference on Magmatism of the Earth and related Strategic Metal Deposits: Early registration deadline: 28 Feb

bulletEGU General Assembly 2018: Early registration deadline: 1 Mar

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