Carissimi Soci SGI,
Carissimi Soci Società Associate,
su indicazione del Dott. Bruno Campo (Università di Bologna), vi segnaliamo la sessione "From river catchments to the deep sea: case studies, applications, state of the art and new frontiers of source-to-sink research", organizzata nell'ambito del 36th International meeting of sedimentology (Dubrovnik, June 12-16).
Cordiali saluti,
La Segreteria
Dear colleagues,
We are glad to announce the call for abstracts for our session 13.4. Special Session: " From river catchments to the deep sea: case studies, applications, state of the art and new frontiers of source-to-sink research"
Convenors: Bruno Campo, Alessandro Amorosi, Michael Blum, Piret Plink-Björklund, Luigi Bruno and Claudio Pellegrini), which is organized for the 36th IAS meeting of Sedimentology (Dubrovnik, Croatia, 12 – 16 June, 2023).
The deadline for abstract submission is 15 February 2023.
You can find more details about the meeting at
https://lnkd.in/dn-piWCt
The second circular can be downloaded here
https://lnkd.in/dM5sMW3e
We are looking forward to meeting you in Dubrovnik!!
13.4 - From river catchments to the deep sea: case studies, applications, state of the art and new frontiers of source-to-sink research
The linkage between onshore to offshore segments, from river catchments to the deep oceans via coastal plains and shelves, is fundamental to unravel the complexity of Sediment Routing Systems (SRSs). Through basin analysis, landscape evolution and multiscale stratigraphic reconstructions, source-to-sink studies aim to quantify sediment generation, transfer, storage, and redistribution on a variety of timescales. The impact of several factors, including human activities and climate changes, can also be assessed by the study of SRSs.
This session aims to discuss the state of the art in source-to-sink analysis in siliciclastic and mixed siliciclastic-carbonate realms on a variety of time scales (from the ancient geological record to the Anthropocene), with a focus on future developments and their potential applications within the context of past, present, and future climate change. We invite presentations from stratigraphers and sedimentary geologists, experimentalists, and numerical modelers that contribute to the advancement of our understanding of SRSs, both in modern and ancient depositional settings.
We particularly welcome comprehensive and interdisciplinary approaches that point to novel concepts of generic significance that enhance the holistic comprehension of: (i) assessment of sediment provenance through compositional characterization of sediments; (ii) dispersal pathways for organic and inorganic detritus; (iii) calculation of sediment volumes delivered to a basin; (iv) sediment-budget calculations reconstructed though geomorphological analyses; (v) processes and mechanisms of sediment production, routing and accumulation; (vi) evolution of sedimentary basins in response to changes in sediment supply and accommodation; (vii) applications to natural resource exploration and exploitation, landscape management, and the social and/or economic impact of source-to-sink investigations.