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> Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 18:22:58 +0100 (BST)
> From: Howard Griffiths <[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Cc: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Isotope conference programme
> Reply-to: Howard Griffiths <[log in to unmask]>
> Dear subscribers, I hope this gives a flavour of what is to come....
>
> STABLE ISOTOPES AND THE INTEGRATION OF BIOLOGICAL,
> ECOLOGICAL AND GEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES
> AAB Meeting to be held at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne
> 9-11 July 1996, in conjunction with SEB and BES.
> The meeting will provide a theoretical and practical framework to the
> analysis and interpretation of the stable isotope signals across a range
> of applications. Latest developments in mass spectrometric analysis and
> sample preparation for carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen will be set
> against the theory underlying fractionation and implications for primary
> production of organic material. The transformations associated with the
> hydrological cycle, soils and vegetation will be compared for a range of
> ecosystems. Ultimately, the aim is to validate models of resource
> acquisition and turnover in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, producing
> a sounder basis for palaeoclimatic reconstruction and more reliable
> predictions for future climate change.
> Provisional programme:
> Monday 8 July
> 12:00 Excursion to Hadrians Wall and the Whin Sill
> 17:00-18.30 Registration at Castle Leazes Halls of Residence
> Tuesday 9 July
> 08:15 REGISTRATION AT CURTIS AUDITORIUM (Buses are available to take
> delegates from Castle Leazes to Curtis Auditorium at 08:30 Tues-Thurs)
>
> Session 1: STABLE ISOTOPES, Introduction and technical
> development
> Keynote lecture:J RAVEN Palaeoatmospheres and
> the evolution of phototrophy
> Manufacturers presentations:FINNEGAN, FISONS VG,
> EUROPA SCIENTIFIC, ANALYTICAL PRECISION
>
> Session 2: Sources: inorganic and organic transformations
> J T BRENNA GCC-IRMS for organic hydrogen
> J VOLKMAN Isotopic analysis of hydrocarbons from a permian shale
> R EVERSHED Compound distributions and d13C of modern and fossil leaves
> G GLEIXNER Origin of refractory organic acids in aquatic ecosystems.
> M COLEMAN Interactions of inorganic and microbial systems.
> G FARQUHAR Interpretation of d18O of leaf material
> J SCHLEUCHER Intramolecular deuterium distributions and plant growth
> conditions
> K FREEMAN Carbon 13 plant lignin records and Quaternary climate variations
> D HOPKINS & D ROBINSON Stable isotopes in studies of nitrogen fluxes in
> and from soils
> L HANDLEY Nitrogen sources and sinks
> T YONEYAMA Nitrogen fractionation during plant uptake and assimilation
>
> AAB Reception and poster session
> CONFERENCE DINNER
>
> Wednesday 10 July
> Session 3: Terrestrial resources and transformations:soil, nutrient and
> water sources
>
> H SCHMIDT 13C patterns in natural compounds and enyzme catalysed reactions
> G GEBAUER NH4+ and NO3- use by forest plants: effect on soils/ground water
> J RICHARDS 15N and bladderworts
> P ERSKINE Plants, penguins and 15N: N pathways on a subantarctic island
> C KENDALL Use of d18O and d15N to detect sources of nitrate in early
> spring run off
> T DAWSON H and O isotope analyses and plant water relations
> D M SMITH Water competition between trees and crops in agroforestry
> J MAGID Plant litter decomposition in a tropical ultisol: a dual isotopic
> study in 13C and14C
> R AMUNDSON Relationship between d18O of soil CO2 and water
> J GAT Stable isotopes and the hydrological cycle
>
> Session 4 Through plant to terrestrial ecosystems
> D YAKIR Leaf water, a cross road for plant associated isotopic signals
> E PENDALL Isotopic tracers of water movement through the soil-plant-
> atmosphere continuum
> E BRUGNOLI Carbon isotope discrimination in stuctural and non-structural
> carbon: adaptation to unfavourable conditions
> J EHLERINGER Integration of arid zone ecosystems using stable isotope
> L FLANNAGAN Oxygen isotope effects during CO2 exchange: from leaf to
> ecosystem processes
> B KRUIJT Do we need isotopes to estimate carbon recycling in plant canopies?
> J R BROOKS Leaf d13C of boreal plants: functional groupings of life forms
> J M GUEHL Diversity in tree species of an Amazonian rainforest: a
> dualisotope approach (d13 C and d15N)
> N BUCHMANN Carbon isotope discrimination of terrestrial ecosystems
>
> POSTER SESSION
> GALA DINNER AT CIVIC CENTRE
>
> Thursday 11 July
> Session 5: Aquatic ecosystems
> A JOHNSTON & H KENNEDY Modelling carbon acquisition & isotopic
> composition in phytoplankton
> N OWENS Nitrogen cycling in oceans
> S BURY C & N biogeochemical cycling in coastal waters off South Georgia,
> Antarctica
> D DES MARAIS Marine cyanobacterial mat ecosystems: isotopic
> discriminationin carbon & sulphur biogeochemical cycles
> H SPERO Effects of seawater chemistry on oxygen and carbon isotopic
> composition of biogenic calcite
> F A STREET-PERROTT, Y HUANG & G EGLINTON 'Heavy carbon' in lake sediments
> and peat during the last glaciation
> P WACHNIEW Controls on isotopic composition of calcite precipitating in
> lake Gosciaz
> M JEDRYSEK Mechanisms of methanogenesis in freshwater sediments
>
> Session 6: Climate change and atmospheric processes
> A FALLICK Carbonates and development of life
> J MARSHALL Carbon isotope ratios & stomatal densities of Miocene fossil
> leaves and modern congeners
> D BEERLING Changes in land-plant function over the Phanerozoic
> T CERLING Calcretes and the evolution of photosynthetic pathways
> G KLINKEN Determining ancient human diet: are plants the key?
> M POLLARD Stable isotopes in archaeology
> V R SWITSUR Stable isotopes in tree ring cellulose
> H MEIJER 18O of CO2 - direct signal of the global biosphere
> P CIAIS Integration of 13C and 18O in atmospheric transport models
>
> Howard -- Looks just great . I shall be sorry to miss it : i could
have learnt a lot. But BOREAS COMES FIRST!! (Ican't underdtand how
Jim and Larry can be away during the main IFC!!)
Paul
>
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