Dear all,
I am writing on behalf of the organizing committee to announce that registration and abstract submission for ISC2010 is now open at http://www.scleroconferences.de
Call for papers:
2nd International Sclerochronology Conference
Mainz, Germany, 24 – 28 July 2010
Who should attend?
Anyone working on (or interested in) the formation and interpretation of growth increments in accretionary hard parts of invertebrate and vertebrate organisms as well as corraline red algae, their geochemistry and crystal fabrics or the underlying processes of biomineralization, should attend this conference. Come to Mainz, share your thoughts and help to bring this fast-developing field forward!
Please note: We also highly welcome contributions from people working with tree rings, speleothems and related bio- and geoarchives.
Details on the 2nd International Sclerochronology Conference are available from the conference website at http://www.scleroconferences.de .
The conference organizers hope to welcome you at the University of Mainz for exciting presentations and discussions in this fast developing field. Please check the website for further information.
Program committee:
- Bernd R. Schöne (conference chair), Geosciences, University of Mainz, Germany
- Andrew L.A. Johnson, Geographical, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Derby, UK
- Claire E. Lazareth, LOCEAN, Institut Pierre Simon Laplace, France
- David P. Gillikin, Earth Science and Geography, Vassar College, USA
- Kazushige Tanabe, Earth and Planetary Science, University of Tokyo, Japan
- Meghan Burchell, Anthropology, McMaster University, Canada
- Thomas Tütken, Steinmann Institute, University of Bonn, Germany
Sclerochronology is the study of physical and chemical variations in the accretionary hard tissues of organisms, and the temporal context in which they formed. Sclerochronology focuses primarily upon growth patterns reflecting annual, monthly, fortnightly, tidal, daily, and sub-daily increments of time entrained by a host of environmental and astronomical pacemakers. Familiar examples include yearly banding in reef coral skeletons and otoliths or daily and annual growth patterns in mollusk shells. Sclerochronology is analogous to dendrochronology, the study of annual rings in trees, and equally seeks to deduce organismal life history traits as well as to reconstruct records of environmental and climatic change through time and space.
Cheers,
David
______________________________________________________________________
David P. Gillikin, Ph.D.
Visiting Assistant Professor of Earth Science and Research Associate
Department of Earth Science and Geography
Vassar College
Box 475
Poughkeepsie, NY 12604
phone: 845-437-5545
main office: 845-437-5540
fax: 845-437-7577
email: [log in to unmask]
web: http://faculty.vassar.edu/dagillikin/
______________________________________________________________________
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