Dewar Simon,
I was out of station onfor field work in Himalayas. Is it possible to send the abstract now.
Prof.C.S.Dubey
Delhi University, India

On Fri, Jan 9, 2009 at 5:10 AM, Linda Kirstein <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Dear all,
We would like to draw your attention to the following interdisciplinary session at the EGU General Assembly, Vienna, Austria, 19– 24 April 2009

GM4.2 Landscape evolution: advances in reconstructing rates and processes
Invited talk by Jim Kirchner (University of California, Berkeley)

Physical interactions between tectonics, climate and surface erosion processes govern how the landscape is sculpted through time. These connections and feedbacks that occur during the evolution of the landscape are varied and occur on a variety of scales, both temporal and spatial. Recent advances in analytical techniques (for measuring rates and processes e.g., fission tracks, (U-Th)/He, stable isotopes and cosmogenic radionuclides) promise to open the black box that connects tectonics, climate and erosion. For example, use of multiple tracers in erosion studies has the potential to constrain erosion rates and processes in both time and space, allowing comparisons of erosion with detailed records of climatic and tectonic records. We actively encourage contributions that investigate the coupling of physical weathering and erosion, sediment generation and transport, and feedbacks between climate and tectonics at scales from soil particles to continental. Especially encouraged are multidisciplinary approaches that incorporate isotope studies and/or modelling in order to understand how the landscape evolves through time on all scales from nano to macro.


All necessary information for the meeting can be found under
http://meetings.copernicus.org/egu2009/

The deadline for the receipt of abstracts is *13 January 2009*

Hope to see you in Vienna.
Kind regards,
Simon Mudd & Linda Kirstein

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