Dear colleagues,
We urge you to consider submitting abstracts to the EGU 2019 General Assembly (7-12 April 2019, Vienna, Austria) and to the session GMPV5.10/NP9.12: Magma Transport, Emplacement, and Eruption: A Petro-Rheological Perspective.
This session is part of the session series co-sponsored by both GMPV-EGU and VGP-AGU. Please, submit your abstracts by 10th January 2019, 13:00 CET. More information related to this session can be found at the following link:
https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/sessionprogramme/GMPVhttps://agu.confex.com/agu/fm18/prelim.cgi/Session/54000
Magmas forge the Earth's lithosphere, modulate its atmosphere and hydrosphere, and drive major biogeochemical changes through volcanism. Magmatic processes operating between crystals, melt, and gas bubbles at the smallest scales give rise to planetary-scale effects. The great challenge in understanding the dynamics of magmatism is the quantitative description of the numerous and interrelated thermo-chemical processes, integrating the dynamics operating on the micro-scales of single mineral, melt, and gas phases with the macro-scales of transport and deformation mechanics that allow magmas to migrate kilometers through the crustal realm.
We wish to stimulate cross-disciplinary collaboration among geologists, geochemists, petrologists, volcanologists, and rock physicists to probe the link between small- versus large-scale, slow versus fast magmatic and volcanic processes in order to reveal the mechanics of transport, emplacement, and eruption of multiphase magmas. We invite contributions from experimental, analytical, numerical, and field-based approaches. This session aims at bringing together the plethora of forensic disciplines in Earth Sciences to understand how we:
- investigate magma rheology and determine the volume and architecture of plutons and plumbing systems
- quantify time-integrated chemical, mechanical, and thermal processes driving magma flow and eruption
- determine the frequency and timescales of magma injections, dykes, and melt extraction events
- interrogate minerals, glasses and melts, or volatile emissions, to constrain microphysics of magmas
- decipher signs of volcanic unrest with respect to magmatic processes
- link volcanic and plutonic processes
at all spatial and temporal scales.
Conveners:
Hélène Balcone-Boissard, Sorbonne Université (Paris) - ISTeP
Chiara Paola Montagna, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, sezione di Pisa
Mike Cassidy, University of Oxford
Danilo Di Genova, Technische Universität Clausthal
Stephan Kolzenburg, McGill University
Mattia Pistone, University of Lausanne
We also remind you that the EGU is committed to promoting the participation of both early career scientists and established researchers from low and middle-income countries who wish to present their work at the EGU General Assembly. Check the eligibility criteria for the EGU Roland Schlich travel support and submit your abstract by 1st December 2018, 13:00 CET:
https://www.egu.eu/ecs/financial-support/
Looking forward to receiving your contributions and seeing many of you at the EGU Meeting!
Best,
Hélène, Chiara, Stephan, Mike, Danilo, Mattia
Dr. PhD Mattia Pistone
Mattia.Pistone@unil.ch
https://mpistonesite.wordpress.com/
https://mpistonesite.wordpress.com/
Institute of Earth Sciences (ISTE)
University of Lausanne (UNIL)
Bâtiment Géopolis – Office 3430
Quartier UNIL-Mouline
CH-1015, Lausanne
Switzerland
Dear colleagues,
We urge you to consider submitting abstracts to the EGU 2019 General Assembly (7-12 April 2019, Vienna, Austria) and to the session GMPV5.10/NP9.12: Magma Transport, Emplacement, and Eruption: A Petro-Rheological Perspective.
This session is part of the session series co-sponsored by both GMPV-EGU and VGP-AGU. Please, submit your abstracts by 10th January 2019, 13:00 CET. More information related to this session can be found at the following link:
https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/sessionprogramme/GMPV<https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm18/prelim.cgi/Session/54000>
Magmas forge the Earth's lithosphere, modulate its atmosphere and hydrosphere, and drive major biogeochemical changes through volcanism. Magmatic processes operating between crystals, melt, and gas bubbles at the smallest scales give rise to planetary-scale effects. The great challenge in understanding the dynamics of magmatism is the quantitative description of the numerous and interrelated thermo-chemical processes, integrating the dynamics operating on the micro-scales of single mineral, melt, and gas phases with the macro-scales of transport and deformation mechanics that allow magmas to migrate kilometers through the crustal realm.
We wish to stimulate cross-disciplinary collaboration among geologists, geochemists, petrologists, volcanologists, and rock physicists to probe the link between small- versus large-scale, slow versus fast magmatic and volcanic processes in order to reveal the mechanics of transport, emplacement, and eruption of multiphase magmas. We invite contributions from experimental, analytical, numerical, and field-based approaches. This session aims at bringing together the plethora of forensic disciplines in Earth Sciences to understand how we:
- investigate magma rheology and determine the volume and architecture of plutons and plumbing systems
- quantify time-integrated chemical, mechanical, and thermal processes driving magma flow and eruption
- determine the frequency and timescales of magma injections, dykes, and melt extraction events
- interrogate minerals, glasses and melts, or volatile emissions, to constrain microphysics of magmas
- decipher signs of volcanic unrest with respect to magmatic processes
- link volcanic and plutonic processes
at all spatial and temporal scales.
Conveners:
Hélène Balcone-Boissard, Sorbonne Université (Paris) - ISTeP
Chiara Paola Montagna, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, sezione di Pisa
Mike Cassidy, University of Oxford
Danilo Di Genova, Technische Universität Clausthal
Stephan Kolzenburg, McGill University
Mattia Pistone, University of Lausanne
We also remind you that the EGU is committed to promoting the participation of both early career scientists and established researchers from low and middle-income countries who wish to present their work at the EGU General Assembly. Check the eligibility criteria for the EGU Roland Schlich travel support and submit your abstract by 1st December 2018, 13:00 CET:
https://www.egu.eu/ecs/financial-support/
Looking forward to receiving your contributions and seeing many of you at the EGU Meeting!
Best,
Hélène, Chiara, Stephan, Mike, Danilo, Mattia
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. PhD Mattia Pistone
Mattia.Pistone@unil.ch
https://mpistonesite.wordpress.com/
<https://mpistonesite.wordpress.com/>
Institute of Earth Sciences (ISTE)
University of Lausanne (UNIL)
Bâtiment Géopolis – Office 3430
Quartier UNIL-Mouline
CH-1015, Lausanne
Switzerland